The Lessons of Kosovo
By William Saletan
Hours after Serb generals agreed to end the war in Kosovo,
Democrats rose on the U.S. Senate floor to gloat. Sen. Joe Biden,
D-Del., called it "a victory for President Clinton and his
administration," and Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., chided conservatives
who had called it "Clinton and Gore's war." More than a week later,
Republicans remain unrepentant. NATO's bombing was unnecessary and
caused the Serbs' ethnic cleansing, former Vice President Dan
Quayle charged yesterday on Meet the Press. "This is not a victory.
I think that this is going to continue to be a mess."
Throughout the 2000 election season and for decades to come,
Democrats and Republicans will go on debating who was right and who
was wrong in Kosovo. They still don't get it. The point isn't who
was wrong. The point is to understand what was wrong and to learn
the corresponding lessons.
- Aggressors don't control the rules. Cynics reasoned that the war
was futile because aggression is the way of the world, and
indomitable ferocity is the way of aggressors. They said Balkan
enmities were too deeply ingrained, Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic
was too ruthless, and the Serbs were too fiercely attached to
Kosovo to back down. While assuming that President Clinton was
infallibly stupid and weak, they assumed that Milosevic was
infallibly clever and resolute. But just as Clinton proved capable
of fighting on, Milosevic proved capable of giving up.
- We can make the rules. Within days of the war's outbreak,
politicians and talking heads pronounced it a failure. Throughout
the bombing, they said NATO, the United States, and Clinton lacked
the ability or resolve to prevail. Pundits assessed the war's
prospects with detached skepticism, as though forecasting the
weather. But war is more than an objective event. Subjective
factors--resolve, confidence, and patience--can prove decisive.
NATO's leaders simply refused to lose. Rather than accept the law
of the jungle, they overrode it. Clinton wagered, as he put it a
week ago, "that we could raise the price to a point where it would
no longer make any sense for [Milosevic] to go on, and where he
could no longer maintain his position if he did." By ending the
war, Milosevic accepted the new rules.
- To impose limits on the enemy, you must know your own. Critics
of the war observed, rightly, that NATO was protecting itself
rather than the Kosovars by refusing to risk its pilots in
low-flying missions or its infantry in a ground invasion. According
to George Will, NATO thereby exposed a "huge limit on its will,"
i.e., "it believes the defense of [its] values is important enough
to kill for, but not important enough to be killed for." But by
depriving Serbia of the ability to kill allied soldiers, NATO
leaders demoralized Serb commanders who had counted on body bags to
demoralize citizens in the West. In essence, NATO held Serb forces
at a safe distance with one arm while pummeling them with the
other. In such a hopeless situation, the Serbs gave up. By taking
into account the limits of its own will--the will to endure
pain--NATO broke Serbia's.
- It's not about who wins. Hawks deride Clinton for having let
squeamish NATO partners such as Italy and Germany curtail the early
stages of the war. They're indignant that we allowed Russia, our
old nemesis and new deadbeat debtor, to water down our terms for
ending the war and sneak its troops into Kosovo ahead of us. They
argue that the Kosovo Liberation Army, not Clinton, won the war by
drawing the Serbs out into the open, where NATO planes could pound
them. While complaining that the United States shoulders too much
responsibility in Europe and will end up paying billions for Balkan
reconstruction, they fret about the loss of American control of the
peacekeeping force. They don't understand that the point of the war
was international justice and peace, not American power.
- It's not about who loses. Many conservatives who argued
throughout the war that we shouldn't have got into it now say we
didn't really win it because we didn't invade Serbia, seize
Belgrade, depose or kill Milosevic, and force the Serbs to agree
explicitly to Kosovar independence. "NATO leaders have left the
Yugoslavian president in power," writes Bob Novak. The peace
agreement includes "no mention of a referendum on Kosovo's
sovereignty," frets Arianna Huffington. But the point of the war
wasn't to conquer or humiliate the Serbs. The point was to stop the
Balkan cycle of conquest and humiliation.
- Just because we're doing something bad doesn't mean the
alternatives are better. By NATO's own estimates, we killed
thousands of Serb troops and civilians. We destroyed bridges,
crippled power plants, accidentally bombed hospitals, and wiped out
Serbia's economy. While Serb forces prevented foreign journalists
from ascertaining the fate of ethnic Albanians inside Kosovo,
American leftists held up images of Serb civilian casualties as
proof that the bombing was wrong and must be stopped. Now that NATO
has persisted and has broken the Serbs' lock on Kosovo, journalists
have gone in and are beginning to confirm the scale of the
atrocities halted by the bombing. As bad as the bombing was,
permitting the atrocities to go on would have been worse.
- Just because we didn't do the right thing before doesn't mean we
shouldn't do it now. Predictably, critics on the left denounced the
war, arguing that the U.S. government's motives were suspect
because we have often invaded small countries for selfish reasons
and have failed to intervene in conflicts when altruism required
it. Unpredictably, critics on the right adopted the same argument,
pointing out that we had failed to act in Rwanda, Chechnya,
Eritrea, and the Sudan. While claiming to have judged the
government by its deeds, both camps judged the current
war--wrongly--by who was waging it.
- It's better to build a law enforcement system than to punish one
outlaw. During the war, hawks who prized human rights and vigilance
accused Clinton of going easy on the Serbs. They faulted him for
letting European leaders veto bombing targets and rule out ground
troops. Now that it's over, they're criticizing him for letting
Russia broker the peace agreement and participate in the
peacekeeping force, and they're still complaining that NATO's
generals "were impeded by civilian leadership from effectively
fighting the war." They don't understand that the allies
compromised with each other and with Russia because they sought
long-term peace--not short-term gratification--and that such peace
requires a level of deterrence that can be achieved only by an
international consortium of civilian leaders.
- Don't define yourself merely by your enemy. For decades, the
Republican Party preached military strength in the face of foreign
expansionism. But now that a Democratic president whom they despise
has led the nation into war, GOP leaders have adopted the arguments
of the counterculture. House Majority Leader Dick Armey, House
Majority Whip Tom DeLay, Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, and
Senate Majority Whip Don Nickles claim that Milosevic was open to
peace all along, that the war and its casualties were our fault,
that we needlessly offended Russia, and that our "victory" is
false. By forsaking their intellectual heritage just to spite
Clinton, they have paid him the ultimate homage. They have allowed
him, through their agency, to redefine the GOP.
- History defies laws. Political analysts pretend to explain the
past and predict the future with the same certainty as natural
scientists. They trotted out numerous theories to establish the
Kosovo mission's futility: Air power alone had never won a war, the
Serbs had proven their invincibility against Hitler, and
negotiation backed by gradual military escalation had failed in
Vietnam. (Thomas L. Friedman of the New York Times even had a
theory that no country with a McDonald's had ever gone to war
against another country with a McDonald's.) None of these theories
panned out in Kosovo. That's because theories apply only in certain
circumstances, and circumstances change. Surveillance and air power
are vastly more sophisticated than in previous wars, NATO has a far
greater power monopoly in Europe than Hitler had, and in Kosovo,
unlike in Vietnam, the isolated party in the war was not the United
States but its enemy.
Who was wrong about Kosovo? Those who were too cynical to challenge
the ways of the world, too preoccupied with the past to see the
present, and too obsessed with who was wrong to recognize what was
right.
Article by William Saletan Posted on Slate.com
Tuesday, June 22, 1999, at 3:00 AM ET
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To cite this page:
The Lessons of Kosovo
<http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~wilkins/writing/Samples/policy/kosovo.html>
[Monday, 08-Sep-2008 13:48:41 EDT]
Edited by: wilkins@mps.ohio-state.edu on
Sunday, 25-Mar-2007 15:11:59 EDT