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<HR SIZE="2"><P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="7" FACE="Palatino">
Chapter 41
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="6" FACE="Palatino">
Kosovo Assessment: Planning for the Next Crisis
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
The Rt Hon Michael Portillo<BR>
Former Secretary of State for Defense of the United Kingdom
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<BR>
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<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">N</FONT>ATO won in Kosovo. Congratulations to all concerned on a great job, and
 congratulations to Hungary on the part it played. And what a relief! If
 we are honest with one another, we know it was a very difficult experience;
 many things were unsatisfactory, we could not be sure of winning, and we
 certainly did not know when victory would come.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B>LEARNING FROM BOSNIA AND KOSOVO</B>
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What can we do to make things work better in the future?
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First, let us dare to plan for the next event. Four years ago, when NATO
 went into Bosnia, we all thought that Kosovo would be next. But we did
 not adopt or implement a plan to deal with it. Foreign Minister Mihailova
 of Bulgaria was right when she said that we came too late to avoid a humanitarian
 tragedy. I was a minister until 1997, so I share in the blame.
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Some people at this Workshop, including Hungarian Prime Minister &#211;rban,
 have said that Vojvodina will be next. Do we have a plan? Have we decided
 on a political direction so that we may prepare and therefore perhaps avert
 another round of killing? Humanitarian considerations apart, it is also
 much more cost-effective to avoid war than to wage it and later pay for
 reconstruction.
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In the case of Bosnia, NATO went in promising to withdraw within a year.
 That promise undermined the process of nation-building. You cannot expect
 refugees to return home if they think that NATO is here today and gone
 tomorrow. We have to be ready to commit to Kosovo for the long term&#151;and
 to Bosnia too&#151;in order to provide their peoples with confidence in a lasting
 peace. The marginal cost of keeping troops in Kosovo rather than Germany
 or Britain is a small price to pay.
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We are now in the uncomfortable position of having left open to chance
 a matter of critical importance to our success. If Mr. Milosevic remains
 in place, it will be difficult for the refugees to return, unreasonable
 to ask the Kosovo Albanians to live within the Former Republic of Yugoslavia,
 and impossible to encourage the men and women who believe in democracy
 and peace to show themselves above the parapet. In short, we do not know
 whether Mr. Milosevic will continue in office or not, but if he does when
 we meet again next year, he may appear as Saddam does today, victorious
 in defeat. At the least we should arrest Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.
 As long as they are free, the people of Republika Srbska will assume that
 they will be back in power one day.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B></B><B>OVERCOMING SHORTFALLS</B>
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When I was a minister I was struck with the fact that we discussed enlargement
 and restructuring but did not ask what NATO was there to do and what forces
 it needed to do it with. General Rupert Smith briefed the Workshop on some
 dismal facts: the Alliance is short of key capabilities; General Smith
 has no statement of requirement; and he believes political interference
 by nations has extended to operational matters. We also heard from Ambassador
 Vershbow that, unfortunately, the recent EU communiqu&#233; on ESDI did not
 include any reference to NATO&#146;s Defense Capabilities Initiative.
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It seems to me that we ought now to be facing the consequences of the two
 operations in which we are involved in Kosovo and Bosnia. The NATO Secretary
 General and SACEUR are in a strong position to define their requirements,
 including the devolution of the authority necessary to run the operations
 effectively and to minimize the risk to our servicemen and women.
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I do not know how it is now, but it used to be that at the meetings of
 Defense Ministers we rushed through agenda items that had to do with requirements,
 forces, and capabilities as though they were of no interest. If Defense
 Ministers are not focused on our shortfalls, there is no hope of changing
 the attitude of member-governments. I was delighted with the presentation
 here on ballistic missile defense. Both in the Workshop and in NATO generally,
 we need more hard-edged presentations and discussions about threats and
 capabilities.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B>THE PARADOX OF ADAPTATION</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Attending this Workshop, I have been struck by how NATO has adapted. It
 used to be that NATO was an Alliance based on defending territory and the
 Article 5 guarantee. Now it says it exists to defend not territory but
 values. I do not dissent. But to say we will defend values, which may be
 attacked anywhere&#151;even well out of area, is a very significant increase
 in our remit.&nbsp;Our aspirations and our rhetoric have expanded as our resources
 have shrunk. Politicians need to be confronted with this paradox.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B></B><B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
I would like to conclude with a few wide-ranging points. First, let us
 not forget the big picture. Although nuclear proliferation continues apace,
 the media scarcely mentions it. We spent $6 trillion on nuclear deterrence,
 but it seems we should be spending much more than we do today on buying
 up nuclear stockpiles and attracting nuclear scientists away from countries
 that are acquiring nuclear weapons. Former U.S. Secretary of Defense William
 Perry&#146;s work on preventive defense has made a valuable contribution to
 this debate.
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Second, China&#146;s reaction to the bombing of its embassy was belligerent
 and hostile. We must work to prevent confrontation between the U.S. and
 China, but that situation was a reminder that the future as well as the
 past may be characterized by Great Power rivalry.
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Last, &nbsp;the Asia-Pacific area looks less stable than it used to, from Korea
 to Indonesia. It may be that the U.S. will find itself drawn toward its
 security interests in the Pacific and away from Europe. That would certainly
 give us Europeans a lot to think about. We would not just need a European
 Defense Identity, we would actually need a European defense capability.
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