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R E C E N T L Y

Prophet of the plague
By Terry Diggs
Charlton Heston's dark view of his fellow humans makes him a perfect president of the NRA

(06/11/98)

Does the CIA stereotype Jews as security risks?
By Jeff Stein
A CIA lawyer denied clearance to work at the White house sues -- and charges that the agency is purging Jews

(06/10/98)

A Clinton critic's tax-exempt lifestyle
(Part Two)

By Jonathan Broder and Joe Conason
As head of the American Spectator's nonprofit foundation, conservative editor R. Emmett Tyrrell enjoys some unusual perks
(06/09/98)

The American Spectator's funny money (Part One)
By Jonathan Broder and Joe Conason
How the American Spectator's attempt to destroy Clinton blew up in its own face

(06/08/98)

The sad death of a soccer maverick
By Tamsin Todd
The tortured life of Britain's first openly gay soccer star ends in tragedy
(06/05/98)

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Salon Newsreal[ Newsreal: A Clinton critic's tax-exempt lifestyle]
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____P O W E R L E S S_I N_Kosovo
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____FOR THE WEST, SABER-RATTLING
____IS CHEAP, BUT ACTION IS UNLIKELY.

BY LOREN JENKINS | WASHINGTON -- With evidence mounting by the hour that another tragic chapter in the Balkans' long history of violence is under way in Kosovo, world concern over the Serbian repression of its southernmost province has reached a fever pitch.

As with Bosnia, fever pitch means a maximum of oratory combined with a minimum of concrete action. And, as with the Bosnian Muslims, the response out of Washington and other Western capitals does not bode well for the plight of Kosovo's Albanian ethnic majority.

First, the oratory. British Prime Minister Tony Blair has termed the crackdown by Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic an act of "barbarism." President Clinton, more politely, called what is happening "unacceptable." Pope John Paul II has weighed in between prayers to speak sorrowfully of "repression and the flights of people" in Kosovo in urging world powers not to remain "inert."

Papal urging and secular saber-rattling notwithstanding, inertia on Kosovo remains the order of the day. Ever since Milosevic's crackdown in Kosovo began three months ago, the West has responded with hand-wringing meetings by NATO foreign ministers, the six-nation Balkan "Contact Group" (Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia and the United States), the European Union in Luxembourg, the White House and the National Security Council. The upshot of those meetings has been a mantra-like recitation of demands for Milosevic to desist and get down to talking to Kosovo's civilian leaders, or face possible military wrath.

The latest round of meetings this week in London and Brussels were no different. The Contact Group discussed a plan to give Milosevic yet another ultimatum to resume talks with Kosovo's moderate civilian leader, Ibrahim Rugova. Thursday, NATO defense ministers warned of possible military options, though they were only able to agree on the dispatch of NATO planes to conduct air maneuvers over Albania and Macedonia, beyond Kosovo's borders.

Milosevic has heard it all before. As far back as 1992, when Yugoslavia first started to fragment, President George Bush warned the Serbian leader to keep his hands off Kosovo militarily or face American intervention, even bombing. Milosevic dodged that threat by refocusing his holy crusade for Serbian dominion on the breakaway republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina. It took four years of vicious civil war and genocidal "ethnic cleansing" campaigns before Western fulminations were translated into military intervention and the flawed peace accords negotiated by U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke.

By then, Milosevic had accomplished his goal. He expanded Serbian power into Bosnia while solidifying his own political dominance over the fragmenting Yugoslavia. He is now gambling he can do the same in Kosovo, the small, impoverished province worshipped as the historic cradle of Serbian nationalism, despite the fact that 90 percent of its current population of 2 million is ethnically Albanian.

N E X T+P A G E+| No more Bosnias? Too late

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Top: A family rests as other ethnic Albanians from the Yugoslav republic of Kosovo walk in the rain along the hills around the village of Tropoja, a quarter mile from the Yugoslav border, Friday. Thousands of refugees are entering the area as fighting between the Serbian forces and the Kosovo Liberation Front continues in southern Kosovo.
PHOTO AP/WIDE WORLD



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[Newsreal: A Clinton critic's tax-exempt lifestyle] [Off your chest: Camille, have you got nothing better to bitch about?]