THE FUTURE OF KOSOVA
A Report of the May 21, 2003, House
International Relations Committee Hearing
by Shirley Cloyes DioGuardi
The
May 21 House International Relations Committee hearing
on "The Future of Kosova" was convened by
Congressman Henry Hyde, Chairman of the House
International Relations Committee, and Congressman Tom
Lantos, the Committee's ranking (number one) Democrat,
at the urging of the Albanian American Civic League, led
by former Congressman Joe DioGuardi and AACL Balkan
Affairs Adviser Shirley Cloyes DioGuardi. The hearing
was the result of more than a year of work on the part
of the Civic League, which began with the introduction
of House Resolution 28, calling on the U.S. government
to declare its support for the unconditional
independence of Kosova now. Congressmen Ben Gilman (now
retired) and Tom Lantos introduced this resolution at
the end of the last Congress. Congressmen Lantos and
Hyde reintroduced it at the opening of the new, 108th
Congress on January 27, 2003. In opening the hearing
Chairman Hyde verbally recognized the instrumental role
that Joe DioGuardi had played in the introduction of
H.Res. 28.
The May 21st hearing, held before a packed audience, was
a milestone in the history of the quest for Kosova's
independence and Albanian freedom. Congressmen Hyde and
Lantos, the Republican and Democratic leaders,
respectively, of U.S. foreign policy deliberations in
the House of Representatives, once again demonstrated
their commitment to the new reality in Kosova. With
oversight responsibility for the State Department, they
showed their willingness to challenge State's
"standards before status" policy, which was
represented at the hearing by Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Janet Bogue
and was supported by U.S. Institute of Peace Balkans
Initiatives Director Daniel Serwer.
Both
Congressmen Lantos and Hyde spoke forcefully about the
need to declare the unconditional independence of Kosova
now and made clear their objection to State Department
policy. Congressman Lantos stated in his opening remarks
that, "Achieving genuine, long-term political and
economic stability in Kosova and in the Balkans requires
more than reconstruction assistance. It also demands the
resolution of the final status of the area, and that
means independence for Kosovars." After describing
the oppression of Kosovar Albanians at the hands of
Serbia under Slobodan Milosevic and Kosova's present-day
economic impoverishment and political marginality as a
UN protectorate, he asserted that, "Those who argue
that we must put 'standards before status' are applying
a double standard to Kosova. Kosova deserves
independence for the same reasons that the other
constituent, autonomous parts of the former Yugoslav
Republic did. Security, democracy, and pure justice
demand it. .We must give Kosova its independence, and we
should do it now."
In a significant and penetrating rebuttal of
administration policy, Congressman Lantos illustrated
what he meant by applying a "double standard"
to Kosova, when he asked Deputy Assistant Secretary
Bogue to tell him what the following, twelve nations had
in common: Andorra, Dominica, Kiribati, Liechtenstein,
Marshall Islands, Monaco, Nauru, Palau, Saint Kitts and
Nevis, San Marino, Seychelles, and Tuvalu. When she was
unable to provide the answer, Congressman Lantos gave
it: All twelve nations are independent, are recognized
by the U.S. government as such, and have populations
numbering less than 100,000. Kosova, meanwhile, has a
population of two million, lacks sovereignty, but is as
ready as any of these nations to be recognized.
He
then asked Deputy Assistant Secretary Bogue if East
Timor were better equipped than Kosova to function as an
independent state. When she deferred to his and others'
expertise on this point, Congressman Lantos replied
that, "Kosova does not exist in a vacuum. I
strongly support the independence of East Timor-a very
tiny, very poor, and incomparable entity to Kosova, yet
one that we view as an independent country. The United
States has an ambassador and an embassy in East Timor.
At the same time, we "establish unreasonable
criteria for Kosova."
Janet Bogue argued that there are a "unique set of
circumstances in Kosova," including the 1999
ratification of UN Resolution 1244, which stipulates
that there will be "a process for deciding the
final status of Kosova." Bogue went on to say that
the U.S. government supports UNMIK administrator Michael
Steiner and the "eight benchmarks" that he has
put in place to "help resolve problems in Kosova."
The benchmarks will make Kosova's final status
resolution "a stabilizing and not a destabilizing
factor," she said.
When Congressman Lantos asked for a "ballpark
timeline" for the completion of the
"benchmarks," sadly Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State Bogue said that she could not provide an
estimate. Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican
representing Southern California, contributed one of the
most memorable ideas to this hearing, when he asked
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Bogue, "How
many of these benchmarks did the United States meet
before it gained its independence?" He argued that,
"If benchmarks are the issue, then today the United
States should not be independent from the British."
Congressman Rohrabacher concluded his remarks by saying
that, "We are prolonging the conflict in the
Balkans because State Department policy is captive-at
the expense of the people of Kosova-to a concern about
the feelings of the oppressors and of Europe."
Instead, he said, our policy should be "based on
the principles of our founding fathers: liberty,
democracy, and justice."
Former
Congressman Joe DioGuardi, the volunteer president of
the Albanian American Civic League, in summarizing his
statement to the Committee, emphasized "the
betrayal of both Albanians and Americans by the State
Department, which has continued to advocate keeping a
rump Yugoslavia together at all costs, now in the form
of Serbia and Montenegro and once again on the backs of
the Albanian people." He described this reality as
part of a "failed foreign policy that will only
serve in the long run to destabilize the Balkans."
DioGuardi criticized the "revolving door"
between the State Department and the private sector, in
which high-level government officials, such as former
Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and Lawrence
Eagleburger, "are allowed to engage in commercial
activities with governments like Serbia's, without
disclosing the financial benefits to their firms and
their behind-the-scenes support for the likes of
Slobodan Milosevic. This is clearly not in our national
interest."
In the remainder of his testimony, former Congressman
DioGuardi drew a sharp contrast between the criminal
activities of Serbian political leaders, such as Vaso
Cubrilovic, Aleksandar Rankovic, and Slobodan Milosevic,
and the tolerance of the Albanian people, which was
epitomized by their saving every Jew who made it to
Albanian lands during the Nazi Holocaust. DioGuardi
submitted Rescue in Albania, a book on this
subject with a Foreword by Congressmen Tom Lantos and
Ben Gilman, for the Congressional Record. He summed up
his remarks by stating that, "We do not need to
repeat in Kosova the mistakes that we made in Iraq,
where our failure to respond led to a second war. The
purpose of this hearing is to wake up the American
people about the possibility of renewed conflict in the
Balkans if we do not grant Kosova its independence
now."
DioGuardi also asked the U.S. government to support
Congressman Lantos's call for an investigation into the
execution of three Albanian American brothers, Agron,
Mehmet, and Ylli Bytyqi, after the war in Kosova. Their
bodies were found in a mass grave in Serbia in July
1999. James O'Brien, a member of The Albright Group, who
testified at the hearing and who was employed by the
State Department's Office of Policy Planning during the
war in Kosova, expressed his support for this effort.
In
her statement before the House, Shirley Cloyes stated
that, "The United States shares a moral imperative
with the world after the Nazi Holocaust to prevent the
resurgence of fascism and ultranationalism in Europe,
and that it is in the vital interests of the U.S.
government to further peace and democracy in the context
of a united Europe.' She affirmed that "resolving
the Albanian dimension of the Balkan conflict, which
begins first and foremost with the independence of
Kosova, is essential to lasting peace and stability in
Southeast Europe." In addition, she asserted that
until we recognize Kosova's sovereignty, the United
States "will continue to recycle the failed foreign
policy of the past at our peril-risking renewed conflict
in the Balkans at a time when we can least afford such
an outcome amid a full-blown crisis in the Middle East
and dangerous instability in Iraq and Afghanistan."
Cloyes stated that her point of departure for evaluating
U.S. foreign policy in the Balkans is "its impact
on the reality that Albanians have faced for 125 years:
namely, arrest, torture, imprisonment, occupation,
ethnic cleansing, mass expulsion, and genocide at the
hands of hostile Slavic regimes." She discussed the
West's role in suppressing this history and its
complicity in the decade of wars waged by Slobodan
Milosevic that left more than 300,000 men, women, and
children in the Balkans dead and four million displaced.
Cloyes explained that the U.S. government is
"operating according to Belgrade-engineered myths
about the Serbian-Albanian conflict that serve to
demonize Albanians and to rationalize their
destruction." She argued that, "It is time to
ask the principal question: "Why is U.S. foreign
policy still Belgrade-centered? Why are we refusing to
confront the main issue-which is the need to de-Nazify
and democratize Serbia? This has been the issue ever
since Milosevic came to power, and it can no longer be
concealed in the wake of the tragic assassination of
Zoran Djindjic, which has revealed the massive and
longstanding collusion in Serbia between war criminals,
organized crime, and the ruling establishment."
Cloyes called the UN's "standards before
status" approach to Kosova a 'mantra' that has less
to do with democracy building and more to do with
Europe's desire to postpone final status resolution in
Kosova." She concluded by stating that she did not
believe that the Bush administration is prepared to give
Kosovar Albanians the assurance they need that they will
not be brought back under Serbian state-sponsored
terrorism and be at risk of genocide once more.
"The American endgame," Cloyes said, appears
to be granting Kosova 'substantial autonomy' under
Serbia-an act that will simply reinforce Western
European economic and political ties to Belgrade that
have been cemented with more than a century of
anti-Albanian racism and Albanian blood."
Former
Ambassador William Walker, the head of OSCE's Kosova
Verification Mission in 1998-1999, expressed his full
support for the independence of Kosova in his remarks to
the Committee. He added that he was "not confident
that the present Serb leadership has fully learned the
lessons of the Milosevic era. If you want a people to
belong to your nation, then you do not do everything
possible to humiliate, repress, and exterminate them. In
my opinion, any attempt by the international community
to reconnect Kosova with Serbia, however thin that
connection, however loose the federation, however ample
the conditions of autonomy, stands no chance of
success." Ambassador Walker and National Albanian
American Council Executive Director Martin Vulaj were
added to the docket of witnesses at the hearing at the
request of Congressman Eliot Engel.
Chairman Henry Hyde closed the hearing by stating that
the testimony presented had made a major contribution to
the debate about why we need to explore the independence
of Kosova now. The Albanian American Civic League
believes that the May 21 hearing has sent an unambiguous
signal to the international community that the leaders
of foreign policy in the U.S. House of Representatives
support the unconditional independence of Kosova now.