Kosovo: War and Revenge

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Kosovo: War and Revenge
Author(s)Tim Judah
PublisherYale University Press
Honors
Tim Judah forecast the Kosovo war in his writings before 1999, reported the Rambouillet peace negotiations, and covered the war from the refugee camps in Macedonia, Albania and Montenegro. Immediately after the Serb withdrawal he went into Kosovo with the NATO forces, interviewing and reporting from both Pristina and Belgrade, which he has continued to visit subsequently. Using his contacts on all sides of the conflict Judah has written the hidden story of the Balkan conflagration, looking at the historical background, the immediate run-up to the war, the…

Tim Judah forecast the Kosovo war in his writings before 1999, reported the Rambouillet peace negotiations, and covered the war from the refugee camps in Macedonia, Albania and Montenegro. Immediately after the Serb withdrawal he went into Kosovo with the NATO forces, interviewing and reporting from both Pristina and Belgrade, which he has continued to visit subsequently.

Using his contacts on all sides of the conflict Judah has written the hidden story of the Balkan conflagration, looking at the historical background, the immediate run-up to the war, the controversy of the NATO bombing, the background to the cease-fire and the NATO peace-keeping operation. This book not only provides the information TV and newspaper coverage didn’t reveal, but gives an intimate account of the conflict as it appeared to those who fought it. There will be other books on Kosovo, but none will be more thorough, informed or immediate.

Honors

Reviews

Amazon.com

Tim Judah lived in Belgrade from 1990 to 1995, reporting for the London Times and the New York Review of Books; and when the “ethnic cleansing” started in Kosovo, he was there. So his Kosovo: War and Revenge is well placed to offer some insights, variously scathing and compassionate, on the whole, sorry mess. It doesn’t matter how many Serbian tanks you (allegedly) knock out with your high-tech bombing raids, “since the most potent weapon in ethnic cleansing is the cigarette lighter needed to set houses on fire.” And Judah can evoke the madness of Kosovo in a single, startling set piece: vengeful Albanians rampaging through a Serbian Orthodox priest’s house, smashing icons, stealing candles; French soldiers from KFOR “looking on amiably”; a nearby Gypsy house also on fire; and a passing French commander explaining to an open-mouthed Judah that the official NATO policy at this moment is “to let them pillage.” Paraphrasing a Belgrade journalist, he notes sadly that Serbia has still not found its Adenauer, nor Kosovo its Mandela, which is what both so desperately need. The introductory chapter, summarizing Kosovo’s tortured and tortuous history, is better rendered in Noel Malcolm’s Kosovo: A Short History, and for a wider overview of the Balkans themselves, one would certainly prefer Misha Glenny’s The Balkans: Nationalism, War, and the Great Powers 1809-1999. For an acerbic and perceptive personal account, however, Judah’s book is hard to beat. —Christopher Hart, Amazon.co.uk

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