Kosovo's Next Masters?
1999; Council on Foreign Relations; Volume: 78; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/20049278
ISSN2327-7793
Autores Tópico(s)European Politics and Security
ResumoThe rumbles of yet another nationalist earthquake are shaking the former Yugoslavia. Rising from the fetid hovels of Pristina and the concrete-block family farms of rural Kosovo is the newest political and military force to beset the Balkans?the Kosovo Liberation Army (kla), known to Albanians as the Ushtria Clirimtare e Kosoves. The emergence of this militant armed group, now numbering several thousand fighters, has dimmed hopes that even a compromise agreement with Belgrade could be successfully implemented. Emboldened by nato's March bombing of the Serbian military, the kla will wage a protracted guerrilla war in the Serbian province that could ignite a wider war in neighboring Macedonia and Albania, potentially even dragging in Greece and Bulgaria. The kla is uncom promising in its quest for an independent Kosovo now and a Greater Albania later. And it has, to the consternation of Washingtons would-be peacemakers, supplanted the ineffectual leadership of the moderate voice of Kosovos ethnic Albanian majority, Ibrahim Rugova. The kla is important out of all proportion to its size?not merely because it will probably eventually get Kosovo to secede from Serbia, but because it now represents the aspirations of most Kosovar Albanians. To understand the current conflict in Kosovo and America s stakes in its
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