There are a lot of Balkan children named after him, but Tony Blair is no hero. Credit: ARMEND NIMANI/AFP via Getty Images

When a civil servant first suggested to Tony Blair that he needed to be aware of the evolving situation in Kosovo, the prime ministerās response was much the same as anyone elseās would have been: āYouād better give me a note on it. Starting with: where is it?ā Even now, a quarter of a century on from the outbreak of the Kosovo War, few of us could answer accurately.
Kosovo then was a province in the south of Yugoslavia, a landlocked area slightly smaller than the Falkland Islands. It was officially part of Serbia ā the largest of the Yugoslav republics ā but was heavily disputed: 90% of the population were Albanian by ethnicity, Muslim by faith. And Kosovo had, for differing reasons, a revered place in the histories of both Serbia and Albania, integral to eachās sense of national identity. As George Orwell noted in 1945: āYugoslav politics are very complicated and I make no pretence of being an expert on them.ā
The Kosovars were a small minority in Yugoslavia, who had long faced discrimination, and long sought independence. That had seemed an implausible hope, but by the time the province came to Blairās attention, things were looking very different. In the first half of the Nineties, Yugoslavia had been ripped apart, with Slovenia, Macedonia, Croatia and Bosnia splitting to become independent countries, the latter two after wars of a bloodiness not seen in Europe since 1945. The Kosovars were still a minority, but ā with Yugoslavia reduced from six constituent republics to just two, Serbia and MontenegroĀ ā they now made up a fifth of the countryās population. Not so small anymore.
In 1995, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began armed actions; by 1998, the insurgency had escalated into serious conflict. The Yugoslav military was attempting to suppress the KLA by terrorising the population: hundreds were killed, thousands raped, and hundreds of thousands displaced. This was the point at which the situation forced itself into the international spotlight, provoking a sense of horrified dĆ©jĆ vu: the earlier Yugoslav Wars had cost the lives of up to 150,000, and made the term āethnic cleansingā common currency. Many in the West were, retrospectively in some instances, feeling ashamed that such destruction had been allowed to run rampant in Europe. Then, the United Nations had tried to contain the killing with an arms embargo and the deployment of some ineffective peacekeepers; mostly they had looked on sorrowfully. And now it was happening again.
āI saw it as essentially a moral issue,ā wrote Blair in his memoirs. There was a humanitarian disaster unfolding, and ā as in Ukraine today ā the blame lay at the feet of one man: in this case the president of Yugoslavia, Slobodan MiloÅ”eviÄ. Action was needed. By June 1998, Britain was talking with its Nato partners about the possibility of an air and land operation; it was another nine months before, in March 1999, Nato began bombing Yugoslavia. āWe have learned from bitter experience not to appease dictators,ā explained Blair, who largely drove the initiative. āWe tried it 60 years ago.ā
There was ā again, as today ā political consensus, with backing for the governmentās actions from the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats, then led by William Hague and Paddy Ashdown respectively. Even Blairās own party was mostly in support. A few on the Left pointed out that the lack of UN authorisation made the bombing entirely illegal, but a motion condemning Natoās actions was signed by just six of the usual suspects, including Tony Benn, Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell. Notably absent was Ken Livingstone, who joined Blair in comparing MiloÅ”eviÄ to Hitler. Robin Cook and Clare Short ā who would both later resign from the cabinet over Iraq ā were fully on board, the former as foreign secretary, the latter dutifully doing the media rounds to defend the government.
Television news played its part in preparing the public for military action, with extensive coverage of the appalling suffering being endured by the Kosovars. In the press, the most notable cheerleaders were to be found at the Guardian. As early as April 1998, an editorial was calling for āintervention if only on humanitarian groundsā and for āthe deployment of troopsā. On the eve of the bombing, the leader column was headlined: āThe sad need for force.ā We have become familiar with that sense of sorrowful necessity in the last 12 months.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe