Winning Ugly: NATO's War to Save Kosovo by Ivo H. Daalder, Michael E. O'Hanlon, Michael E. O'Hanlon

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: June 2000
  • 343pp
  • Sales Rank: 470,573
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2000
    • Publisher: Brookings Institution Press
    • Format: Paperback, 343pp
    • Sales Rank: 470,573

    Booknews

    Both from the Institute, Daalder was director or European affairs on the National Security Council, and so responsible for coordinating US policy for Bosnia in 1995 and 1996, while O'Hanlon specializes in US defense strategy and has also worked for the US government. They consider whether the Kosovo bombing was the product of failed western diplomacy, and whether NATO adopted a sound strategy to achieve its aim of stabilizing Kosovo. They conclude that the western parties did the best they could, but warn that in the future they should try to avoid such a situation. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

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    Winning Ugly: NATO's War to Save Kosovoby Anonymous

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    August 24, 2000: This is a serious and worthwhile study which analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of American leadership and the NATO system in its first offensive war. It is particularly useful to read this book after Kaplan's The Coming Anarchy (also reviewed). Kaplan makes clear there will be a lot more destruction of humanity that will require American leadership and the use of force. Daalder and O'Hanlon make clear that we have a lot to learn if we are going to engage in campaigns like Kosovo. Anyone who plans to advise the next Administration would be well served by reading these two books together and pondering their implications for improving American decision making and coalition leadership skills in the context of interventions in dangerous places. The clearest points in this book are Daalder and O'Hanlon's judgments that this was the right war, it was ultimately a success, airpower had a powerful but limited influence and without the threat of a land campaign and the Russian abandonment of Milosevic. In their view, airpower by itself would have failed, and that the United States has to lead for these interventions to work and the Clinton Administration consistently failed to lead the public, the Congress or our allies and because of the Clinton's Administrations prior vacillation on Saddam Hussein (loud threats, tiny attacks that ended quickly without coercing Saddam). The confused posturing of the Clinton Administration actually increased the likelihood that force would have to be used because Milosevic had no reason to believe they would actually fight to the end. Once NATO had consolidated its position and the Administration had launched the gamble of forceful coercion Daalder and O'Hanlon give Clinton and the allies high marks for realizing that NATO had to win or cease to be relevant and they stepped up to the challenge. Their critique of the Clinton Administration is decisive and thorough: 'Having failed to make a public case for the use of force, the Clinton administration opted for a minimalist strategy. Its hope was that a bit of bombing would work. This was the military equivalent of the 'Hail Mary' play in football. Not only was this an irresponsible way to go to war, it also was unnecessary. A case for decisive military action-at a minimum, a robust air campaign from the war's outset--could have been made. The American public would probably have supported such a strategy given its disdain for Milosevic and memories of the Bosnian war. The tragedy of this case is that, in fearing the absence of public and congressional support, the administration embarked on the use of force lacking both. That is no basis for taking the tremendous risks that the use of force necessarily implies.' (pages 224-225). This is a book worth studying and thinking about.