Tag: United States
Stevenson’s army November 5
– Russia is sending mercenaries to Libya.
– With US absent, rest of Asia looks to trade deals with China.
– Tariff rollbacks likely part of US-China trade agreement.
– NYT says Pompeo “in peril,” losing trust at State.
– NYT has deeper look at Iraqi protests against Iran.
– The most important presidential election news: NYT poll shows Trump strong in battleground states; 2/3 of Trump 2016 and Dem 2018 voters say they’ll vote for Trump in 2020.
– Departing official criticizes Trump Syria policy.
– Former officials argue realists wrong about Syria.
– Academics say Trump quid pro quos aren’t normal.
– WaPo says many migrants are funded by microfinance programs.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. If you want to get it directly, To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).
Stevenson’s army October 30
In a stunning double defeat, the House Wednesday voted 403-16 to impose tough sanctions on Turkey for its invasion of Syria and for the first time ever voted to recognize the Armenian genocide. WaPo has good background on the lobbying efforts that prevented such a vote until now.
Lt.Col Vindman fills in the ellipses, saying that he tried unsuccessfully to get words he overheard in the Trump-Zelensky phone call incorporated into the memcon.
Where are the carriers? In Newport for repairs.
CFR says farmers are $7 billion in the hole because of the trade war with China.
Look at WSJ’s list of the many arguments used by the administration to assert untrammeled presidential power.
How to reduce hyperpartisanship? FP suggests ways to get a multiparty system.
Defense News has a good rundown on what’s in and not in the “skinny” NDAA draft.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. If you want to get it directly, To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).
Albania needs to double down
I delivered these remarks this morning at a Mediterranean University of Albania conference on “US policy in the Western Balkans” in Tirana:
It is a great pleasure to be back in Tirana. My thanks to the Mediterranean University of Albania for inviting me and making it possible.
I think it has been at least 10 years since I was here last. I only needed to drive around a bit yesterday afternoon to see how dramatically Tirana has changed since then, never mind since my first visit here in 1997 to observe an election held in the midst of gunfire.
But let me get to Albania later. First I would like to discuss the world as seen by an American, then the Balkans region, and lastly Albania in the regional and global contexts.
The world today is a disordered one. The unipolar moment that enabled so much of what the United States did to bring order to the Balkans in the 1990s ended with the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.
There ensued a war on terror that initially enlisted much of the world in response: NATO triggered Article 5 and supported the US invasion of Afghanistan, but unanimity was quickly lost with the invasion of Iraq and the Sunni insurgency there, led by Al Qaeda and Ba’athist diehards.
The 2008 financial crisis further frayed international consensus: European growth has still not recovered while China’s rise accelerated, and high oil and gas prices gave Russia opportunities to revive its military and reassert its great power status, which it has done with interventions in Ukraine and Syria.
The Greek financial crisis, Brexit, immigration, and the rise of the populist ethno-nationalist right within the EU and in the US have changed the basic parameters of our geopolitics.
Today we live in a world in which the liberal democratic consensus, based on free markets and the conviction that everyone is entitled to equal rights and opportunities, has frayed.
Russia, China, Turkey, and others are offering an alternative autocratic bargain: in exchange for unfettered long-term power, their leaders are offering state-sponsored economic growth and political stability, at least to those who identify with the majority ethnic group.
How does all this impact the Balkans?
First and foremost slow economic growth in Europe depresses the Balkan economies; the region can only thrive when the EU does.
Europessimism correlates closely with the business cycle. Only with a revival of growth will Europe show renewed interest in enlargement, which will provide the young labor Europe lacks and needs.
Second: Moscow’s trouble making, while not so evident in Albania, is plaguing Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia. Your neighbors are facing concerted efforts to slow or block NATO and EU accession. Even Montenegro and North Macedonia are still targeted.
Moscow has re-introduced into the Balkans assassination, state disinformation and propaganda, and rent-a-riot techniques we all hoped had disappeared with the Soviet Union.
Third: China, during the Cold War Enver Hoxha’s only friend in the world, is offering financing for much-needed infrastructure.
Unlike many Westerners, I see lots of potential benefit in Beijing’s Belt and Road projects, but caveat emptor: China isn’t giving aid, it is financing projects it regards as beneficial to China on terms that can be onerous if the expected returns fail to materialize.
Fourth: Turkey, as a former colonial power in much of the Balkans and a near neighbor, naturally plays an important role in the region. But President Erdogan has taken a turn in the autocratic and Islamist direction.
His example is no longer as positive as once it was, and his efforts to get Balkan countries to capture and render his enemies are undermining rule of law in young Balkan democracies.
Let me turn now to put the focus on the Balkans themselves.
My view is that there are only two remaining war and peace issues in the region.
One is normalization of relations between Kosovo and Serbia.
The other is fixing the dysfunctional government we gave Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Dayton peace agreements.
Before anything can happen on normalization, Pristina needs a new government. I imagine that means the LDK and Vetevendosje will share power in a post-electoral coalition, perhaps supported by some lesser parties, including some representing minorities.
As far apart as the LDK and VV are on some issues and in electoral constituencies, they both grew out of the nonviolent protest movement in Kosovo and will be replacing a KLA coalition whose partners grew out of the violent rebellion.
I hope that betokens a renewed commitment to Kosovo statehood, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, as well as a broader coalition for the dialogue with Belgrade, along the lines of the platform that the last parliament prepared but the constitutional court ruled was the responsibility of the government.
The Europeans and Americans will be pressing Pristina hard for an agreement with Belgrade in advance of Serbia’s April 2020 election. I see no advantage to Kosovo in giving in to this pressure.
Pristina will need to be ready to walk away from a bad deal in order to get a good one. A bad deal is one that in any way breaches the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity; a good one will allow for ample decentralization and self-governance for minority communities.
Some of you will no doubt ask, but what does the appointment of two US envoys betoken about US policy on normalization?
The short answer is that I don’t know. I think it reflects more confusion than intention. But I won’t be surprised if the ethnic nationalist Ambassador Grenell, who has done his best to offend the German government, tries to revive the land swap idea that failed so miserably the last time around.
Let me be clear: the permanence of borders—and specifically the refusal to move internal boundaries to accommodate ethnic differences when changing them to international borders—is fundamental to peace and security in the region, since it was established by the Badinter Commission in the early 1990s.
As for Bosnia and Herzegovina, I fear it will need to wait. The international community is simply incapable of dealing with two big issues at once.
Milorad Dodik will continue to fulminate about independence, some Croats will continue to dream of a third entity, and the Bosniaks will try to ignore both and defend the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
But until there is a concerted effort that gains the support of all three constituent peoples to enable the Sarajevo central government to negotiate and implement the acquis communautaire, I fear little will change.
Let me turn now to Albania.
This country has made fantastic progress: you are now a member of NATO and a candidate for EU accession.
Let’s remember: when I first came here just 22 years ago, the country was in chaos, in the aftermath of the collapse of the pyramid schemes.
Since then you’ve seen good if not spectacular economic growth, the construction of a post-Communist state and a market economy, and integration with the other Balkan countries as well as with the rest of Europe.
You have met the criteria for opening of EU accession negotiations. It is only internal political circumstances in two other European countries that have prevented it from happening.
France and the Netherlands should be ashamed of what they’ve done to both North Macedonia and Albania.
But they are not, because both are democratic countries with leaders responding to pressures from their own national constituencies. Albanians and Macedonians don’t get to vote in Paris or The Hague.
The question now is how to respond to this clearly unjustified and reprehensible delay in acknowledging achievements that both Skopje and Tirana are rightly proud of.
You are of course disappointed and angry. I share those sentiments. But they won’t get you far.
The right response I am afraid is renewed commitment to the reforms required for EU membership. NATO membership for Macedonia points in the right direction.
Delayed opening of negotiations should not delay implementation of the acquis. Most of the benefits of EU membership come well before accession, from the reforms you undertake.
Tirana has made remarkable progress getting to the verge of opening negotiations, but it can make still more during the current delay, however long it lasts.
Take a hint from the Montenegrins: they never stopped preparing for NATO membership, even when people in Washington thought it unlikely. They likewise press on with adopting the acquis, knowing full well that the French and Dutch may be no more favorable to Montenegro’s accession than they have been to opening negotiations with North Macedonia and Albania.
I’m reminded of Zeno’s paradox: if you halve the distance between any two people every second, they should never touch mathematically. But they do in practice.
Make Albania an EU-compliant country in every aspect of the acquis, which will take a decade or more, and one day politics in France and the Netherlands will allow accession to happen.
There are, it seems to me, two areas that require priority attention in Albania: one is rule of law; the other is political behavior.
You are tired I know of the Americans and Europeans who preach rule of law. So am I. But you need it, not for EU membership but for yourselves.
Your institutions are much better than once they were, but you still lack a “culture of lawfulness.” It is not easy to create, and I would readily admit that parts of the United States seem to me to lack it.
But that is what you need to ensure that the law doesn’t need to be enforced as much as it prevails because that is what citizens want.
I know it is difficult to accept, but in liberal democracies rights, privileges, and responsibilities adhere to the individual, not to families, clans, ethnic groups, or even political parties.
The day will come here, as it has in Chicago, when getting a job for your unqualified cousin is not a family obligation but a corrupt abuse of power.
The day will also come when you will not tolerate politicians who have sources of wealth they are unable to account for. Some of your judges have already been dismissed on these grounds.
Universities like this one are vital for the preparation of a new cadre of qualified individuals who will not rely on connections but on talents and merit for their careers and income.
Those qualified individuals will also moderate political behavior, which along with rule of law is particularly important in this highly conflictual country.
In real democracies, there is always the possibility of alternation in power. Serving in the opposition is frustrating but just as important to the system as serving in the majority.
Some of you will of course see the remarks I am about to make as suggesting that I am taking sides. That is not my intention.
I aim instead trying to convince you that participation is an obligation, even if you think the system is unfair.
But somehow in the Balkans people think they will gain more by boycotting than participating.
Sure there are political processes I might want to boycott, but the normal behavior should be participation.
Liberal democracies depend on separation of powers and institutional limits on executive power. Political participation and insistence on professionalization of government functions can help make that a reality.
People who don’t vote, parties that don’t run in elections, or don’t occupy the seats or jobs they have won are not doing their best to fulfill the responsibility to represent their constituencies.
Nor can a country hope to assume its proper role internationally if it is unable to be inclusive domestically.
A word about foreign policy. Every now and then, the Albanian question arises: will Albanians live in six different Balkan countries, or will they challenge the existing territorial arrangements?
Nothing could harm Albania’s ambitions to join Europe more than unsettling borders or enunciating irredentist ambitions, as politicians are sometimes tempted to do.
Washington and Brussels will remain unequivocal in rejecting Greater Albania, which would lead to catastrophic population movements and widespread instability.
The wise course for Albania and Kosovo is to cure their internal ills within their current borders, maintain good relations with all their neighbors, and enjoy close cultural ties with Albanians who live in other countries.
In the end, there is no Plan B. Democracy and free markets, unencumbered by corruption and regulated by law, are the best way to ensure fair competition and rational decisions by individuals, companies, and politicians.
Nothing the Dutch or French do can prevent you from creating that kind of Albania. You are free to choose: I hope you will do so wisely.
Croatia in context
I spoke this afternoon at a National Federation of Croatian Americans session on “Croatia’s Role in Southeastern Europe–Facing Instability in the Region.” Time was shorter than anticipated, so I started at 16. My assignment was to talk about the main issues beyond Croatia in the Balkans, but I got to the Bosnian Croats and Croatia at the end.
- The world today is a disordered one. The unipolar moment that enabled so much of what the United States and Europe did in the Balkans in the 1990s ended with the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.
- There ensued a war on terror that initially enlisted much of the world in response: NATO triggered Article 5 and supported the US invasion of Afghanistan, but unanimity was quickly lost with the invasion of Iraq and the Sunni insurgency there, led by Al Qaeda and Ba’athist diehards.
- The 2008 financial crisis further frayed international consensus: European growth has still not recovered while China’s rise accelerated, and high oil and gas prices gave Russia opportunities to reassert its great power status, which it has done with interventions in Ukraine and Syria.
- The Greek financial crisis, Brexit, immigration, and the rise of the populist ethno-nationalist right within the EU and in the US have changed the basic parameters of our geopolitics.
- Today we live in a world in which the liberal democratic consensus, based on free markets and the conviction that everyone is entitled to equal rights and opportunities, has frayed.
- Russia, China, Turkey, and others are offering an alternative autocratic bargain: in exchange for unfettered long-term power, their leaders are offering state-sponsored economic growth and political stability, at least to those who identify with the majority ethnic group.
- How does all this impact the Balkans?
- First and foremost slow economic growth in Europe depresses the Balkans economies; the region can only thrive when the EU does.
- Europessimism correlates closely with the business cycle. A revival of growth in Europe is vital for renewed interest in enlargement, which will provide the young labor Europe lacks and needs.
- Second: Moscow’s trouble making is plaguing Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia. Croatia’s neighbors are facing concerted efforts to slow or block NATO and EU accession. Even Montenegro and North Macedonia are still targeted.
- Moscow has re-introduced into the Balkans assassination, state disinformation and propaganda, and rent-a-riot techniques we all hoped had disappeared with the Soviet Union.
- Third: China is offering financing for much-needed infrastructure.
- Unlike many Westerners, I see lots of potential benefit in Beijing’s Belt and Road projects, but caveat emptor: China isn’t giving aid, it is financing projects it regards as beneficial to China on terms that can be onerous.
- Fourth: Turkey, as a former colonial power in much of the Balkans and a near neighbor, naturally plays an important role in the region. But President Erdogan has taken a turn in the autocratic and Islamist direction.
- His example is no longer as positive as once it was, and his efforts to get Balkan countries to capture and render his enemies are undermining rule of law in young Balkan democracies.
- Let me turn now to put the focus on the Balkans themselves.
- My view is that there are only two remaining war and peace issues in the region.
- One is normalization of relations between Kosovo and Serbia.
- The other is fixing the dysfunctional government we gave Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Dayton peace agreement.
- Before anything can happen on normalization, Pristina needs a new government. I imagine that means the LDK and Vetevendosje will share power in a post-electoral coalition, perhaps supported by some lesser parties, including some representing minorities.
- As far apart as the LDK and VV are on some issues and in electoral constituencies, they both grew out of the nonviolent protest movement in Kosovo and will be replacing a KLA coalition whose partners grew out of the violent rebellion.
- I hope that betokens a renewed commitment to Kosovo statehood, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, as well as a broader coalition for the dialogue with Belgrade, along the lines of the platform that the last parliament prepared but the Kosovo constitutional court ruled was the responsibility of the government.
- The Europeans and Americans will be pressing Pristina hard for an agreement with Belgrade in advance of Serbia’s April 2020 election. I see no advantage to Kosovo in giving in to this pressure.
- Pristina will need to be ready to walk away from a bad deal in order to get a good one. A bad deal is one that in any way breaches the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity; a good one will allow for ample decentralization and self-governance for minority communities.
- Some of you will no doubt ask, but what does the appointment of two US envoys betoken about US policy on normalization?
- The short answer is that I don’t know. I think it reflects more confusion than intention. But I won’t be surprised if the ethnic nationalist Ambassador Grenell, who has done his best to offend the German government, tries to revive the land swap idea that failed on its merits so miserably the last time around.
- The failure of the EU to move ahead with accession negotiations with Albania and North Macedonia will undermine the credibility of Brussels and Washington in upcoming talks between Belgrade and Pristina.
- But neither Tirana nor Skopje should give up hope. Both should do as Montenegro did with NATO membership and continues to do for EU membership: get ready, implement the needed reforms, improve your qualifications, so that when the political window opens you can move quickly in.
- As for Bosnia and Herzegovina, I fear it will need to wait. The international community is simply incapable of dealing with two big issues at once.
- Milorad Dodik will continue to fulminate about independence, somoe Croats will continue to dream of a third entity, and the Bosniaks will try to ignore both and defend the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
- But until there is a concerted effort that gains the support of all three constituent peoples to enable the Sarajevo central government to negotiate and implement the acquis communautaire, I fear little will change.
- That’s my message to Bosnian Croats: stop wasting effort on the third entity, which isn’t going to happen.
- You own a third of the State, use it to help Bosnia and Herzegovina do the reforms necessary for EU accession.
- Beyond that, Croatia can play a crucial role as an EU and NATO member state in keeping hope alive. I trust it will do that.
Stevenson’s army, October 24
– HASC has a panel that seems well-focused on a major future problem.
– The USG may have to survive on a CR lasting until Feb or March.
– Lawfare has more on illegal delays in Ukraine aid by OMB.
– Dean Cohen on Trump.
My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. If you want to get it directly, To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).
Murder most foul
The House yesterday passed concurrent resolution 32. Here it is:
Expressing the sense of Congress regarding the execution-style murders of United States citizens Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi in the Republic of Serbia in July 1999.
Whereas brothers Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi were citizens of the United States, born in Chicago, Illinois, to ethnic Albanian parents from what is today the Republic of Kosovo, and who subsequently lived in Hampton Bays, New York;
Whereas the three Bytyqi brothers responded to the brutality of the conflict associated with Kosovo’s separation from the Republic of Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia of which Serbia was a constituent republic by joining the so-called Atlantic Brigade of the Kosovo Liberation Army in April 1999;
Whereas a Military-Technical Agreement between the Government of Yugoslavia and the North Atlantic Council came into effect on June 10, 1999, leading to a cessation of hostilities;
Whereas the Bytyqi brothers were arrested on June 23, 1999, by Serbian police within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia when the brothers accidently crossed what was then an unmarked administrative border while escorting an ethnic Romani family who had been neighbors to safety outside Kosovo;
Whereas the Bytyqi brothers were jailed for 15 days for illegal entry into the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in Prokuplje, Serbia, until a judge ordered their release on July 8, 1999;
Whereas instead of being released, the Bytyqi brothers were taken by a special operations unit of the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs to a training facility near Petrovo Selo, Serbia, where all three were executed;
Whereas at the time of their murders, Ylli was 25, Agron was 23, and Mehmet was 21 years of age;
Whereas Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was removed from office on October 5, 2000, following massive demonstrations protesting his refusal to acknowledge and accept election results the month before;
Whereas in the following years, the political leadership of Serbia has worked to strengthen democratic institutions, to develop stronger adherence to the rule of law, and to ensure respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, including as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia evolved into a State Union of Serbia and Montenegro in February 2003, which itself dissolved when both republics proclaimed their respective independence in June 2006;
Whereas the United States Embassy in Belgrade, Serbia, was informed on July 17, 2001, that the bodies of Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi were found with their hands bound and gunshot wounds to the back of their heads, buried atop an earlier mass grave of approximately 70 bodies of murdered civilians from Kosovo;
Whereas Serbian authorities subsequently investigated but never charged those individuals who were part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs chain of command related to this crime, including former Minister of Internal Affairs Vlajko Stojilkovic, Assistant Minister and Chief of the Public Security Department Vlastimir Djordjevic, and special operations training camp commander Goran Guri Radosavljevic;
Whereas Vlajko Stojilkovic died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in April 2002 prior to being transferred to the custody of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia where he had been charged with crimes against humanity and violations of the laws or customs of war during the Kosovo conflict;
Whereas Vlastimir Djordjevic was arrested and transferred to the custody of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in June 2007, and sentenced in February 2011 to 27 years imprisonment (later reduced to 18 years) for crimes against humanity and violations of the laws or customs of war committed during the Kosovo conflict;
Whereas Goran Guri Radosavljevic is reported to reside in Serbia, working as director of a security consulting firm in Belgrade, and is a prominent member of the governing political party;
Whereas the Secretary of State designated Goran Radosavljevic of Serbia under section 7031(c) of the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2018 as ineligible for entry into the United States due to his involvement in gross violations of human rights;
Whereas two Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs officers, Sretan Popovic and Milos Stojanovic, were charged in 2006 for crimes associated with their involvement in the detention and transport of the Bytyqi brothers from Prokuplje to Petrovo Selo, but acquitted in May 2012 with an appeals court confirming the verdict in March 2013;
Whereas the Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic promised several high ranking United States officials to deliver justice in the cases of the deaths of Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi;
Whereas no individual has ever been found guilty for the murders of Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi or of any other crimes associated with their deaths; and
Whereas no individual is currently facing criminal charges regarding the murder of the Bytyqi brothers despite many promises by Serbian officials to resolve the case: Now, therefore, be it
That it is the sense of Congress that—
(1) those individuals responsible for the murders in July 1999 of United States citizens Ylli, Agron, and Mehmet Bytyqi in Serbia should be brought to justice;
(2) it is reprehensible that no individual has ever been found guilty for executing the Bytyqi brothers, or of any other crimes associated with their deaths, and that no individual is even facing charges for these horrible crimes;
(3) the Government of Serbia and its relevant ministries and offices, including the Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office, should make it a priority to investigate and prosecute as soon as possible those current or former officials believed to be responsible for their deaths, directly or indirectly;
(4) the United States should devote sufficient resources fully to assist and properly to monitor efforts by the Government of Serbia and its relevant ministries and offices to investigate and prosecute as soon as possible those individuals believed to be responsible for their deaths, directly or indirectly; and
(5) progress in resolving this case, or the lack thereof, should remain a significant factor determining the further development of relations between the United States and the Republic of Serbia.