Interview with PADDY ASHDOWN MP - Leader of the Liberal Democrats




 
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 ON THE RECORD
                           PADDY ASHDOWN  FIRST INTERVIEW                

                           
 
RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION: BBC ONE                          DATE:    21.2.99

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JOHN HUMPHRYS:                             But first the two sides in the Kosovo 
peace talks have been moving closer to an agreement. One vital sticking point is 
the Serbs refusal to accept NATO peacekeeping troops and Western governments still 
insisting that that is a non negotiable element in any agreement. So, the threat 
to use military force against the Serbs remains, but the Kosovo Albanian delegation 
have also not yet fully accepted the agreement.  The Liberal Democrat leader Paddy 
Ashdown has made a number of visits to the former Yugoslavia and he joins me now 
from his home in Yeovil.  Mr Ashdown, good afternoon, 

ASHDOWN:                    Good afternoon, John...

HUMPHRYS:                    If Milosevic  does not give way, 
and the signs at the moment are that he won't, should we bomb him?

ASHDOWN:                    We should be prepared to back up 
the threats that we have made which have supported our diplomatic efforts in Rombouillet 
and elsewhere, if we don't then we will simply have no leverage left, we know perfectly 
well that Milosevic is only prepared to act diplomatically where there is a credible 
use, a credible threat of the use of force and if it comes to that then we should 
be prepared to do it but it must be done with a clear political aim and I notice 
today that Robin Cook quite rightly in my view said that if we can't reach a solution, 
a settlement with the Kosovo Albanians then there won't be a political aim to use 
military force in order to be able to support.

HUMPHRYS:                    So what happens then, let's assume 
that the Kosovo's say no, we don't like this deal because we don't see independence 
at the end of the road. Milosevic says we wont let NATO peacekeeping troops in to 
Kosovo what then! Where do we go from there.

ASHDOWN:                    Well that's exactly the point John 
and that's when Hardy comes to Hardy and I notice today that Robin Cook said that 
he actually thought they'd got rather further than he imagined they would get. That 
must mean that the government went into these talks quite rightly rather pessimistic 
about the possibility of getting an outcome, it's right to have pursued it but pessimistic 
about the possibilities. That means that they must have an idea what will happen 
if these talks do not succeed. And I remain pretty pessimistic about it I must confess. 
I mean a balance of probabilities I'd say forty-sixty against, although there are 
good signs about what might happen over the next two or three days. Now you are then 
brought hard up against the question which I and others have been trying to pose 
to the Western nations for some time, because you are left then with only two options. 
 Option One, pull the verifiers, pull the monitors out, Option Two, put the troops 
in. Now on the face of it, Option One would seem easier, pull the monitors out, but 
what happens then is this, that President Milosevic sees that as a green light to 
attempt a final solution and I use the word in all its twentieth century connotations 
in Kosovo, and the West will then stand by and watch Kosovo descend into terrifying 
bloodshed and the almost inevitability of spreading war in the southern Balkans. 
I rather doubt that, so I think there are some very hard issues to be resolved if 
these talks do fail. And I said yesterday and I mean it, that I think Europe now 
stands closer to war on the Continent of Europe than we have at any time since the 
Berlin crisis in the late forties and early fifties, it's that dangerous a moment.

HUMPHRYS:                    But if we take your option two 
and put the troops in, that would of course include a large number of British troops, 
we will inevitably end up with British troops being killed, would the people of this 
country say well that's OK or would they say, we're not involved and we should not 
be involved in what is a dispute in a sovereign country.

ASHDOWN:                    That was the constant question I 
was asked when I was recommending actions we finally took in Bosnia which if we'd 
taken earlier would have resolved the matter much more simply with much less danger 
and vastly less bloodshed. My view is that the British people are far more robust 
than many of their politicians and perhaps even many of their press commentators 
too, John, but the question .......

HUMPHRYS:                    Even when the troops are coming 
home in body bags?

ASHDOWN:                    No let's wait and see, the question 
is this, those who argue that this is not in Britain's interests ought to reflect 
on the fact that a war in the southern Balkans at the end of this century, above 
all any other century, with the lessons that we have learnt  with a spreading of 
that war into Macedonia, Albania, Romania, and then perhaps involving Greece and 
Turkey is a terrifying consequence, so the question is not what is the price of action, 
the question you have to address yourself to as so often in the Balkans, what would 
be the price of inaction and my judgement is that would be immeasurably greater. 
Now I hope it won't come to that, I hope reason will prevail, I have good reason 
to think that Milosevic may need a bout of bombing, what a shocking phrase to use, 
in order to, for him to be able to explain to the Serb nations why he must back down 
 on Kosovo all I am saying is that this is a very dangerous moment, I think the Western 
nations have followed the right policy, albeit too late to do it at lesser risk, 
but the consequences of what happens for Rambouillet and the consequences of what 
happens after that are immense.  Immense of Kosovo, immense for the peace of the 
southern Balkans and immense as we shall discuss no doubt later on for the concept 
of Europe beginning to have control of its own defence around its own borders, rather 
than always relying on Uncle Sam to come in and bale us out in our own backyard. 


HUMPHRYS:                    So it is possible yet that we will 
bomb Milosevic, bomb the Serbs, it is also possible that we will, should, send troops 
in to Kosovo if the Kosovo Albanians themselves do not agree to this peace deal. 
Both of those are possibilities.

ASHDOWN:                    John, there are some literally horrifying, 
literally terrifying decisions that have to be taken in the near future, all I will 
say is this, we know a number of things we know that diplomacy which is not backed 
by the credible threat by the use of force does not work with the Serbs. We know 
that we have made that threat, we know now that we may have to carry it out, we also 
know Bosnia's taught us if we hadn't learned elsewhere that you can never use political 
force unless it is to achieve a, you can never use military force unless it is to 
achieve a political aim, and we also know, or at least we ought to that the actions 
of the Serbs in Kosovo has now diminished if not removed their moral authority to 
govern the province of Kosovo on the basis of five per cent of the population. The 
status of Kosovo therefore cannot go back to being  a part of Serbia in the same 
way as it was in the past. Now to move from there to where we might want to be in 
ten years time I think we have to pass through a transitional period and that transitional 
period must involve some kind of quasi dei facto protectorate of Kosovo in order 
to be able to stabilise, not only Kosovo but the region, now those are the ingredients. 
The decisions we have to take in the next week or two weeks as to whether and if 
so how force is going to have to be used are decisions of the greatest magnitude, 
not just for Kosovo and the peace of the southern Balkans but also for the developing 
idea of Europe having a foreign policy.

HUMPHRYS:                    Well let's leave it there for the 
moment because I want to come back to you.         



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