NATO's
Top Commander Visits Troops In Kosovo
PRISTINA, Serbia (AP)--NATO's supreme commander Tuesday was visiting
alliance peacekeepers in Kosovo, where tensions have been high in anticipation
of proposals for the disputed province's future status.
U.S. Army Gen. Bantz J. Craddock was making his first inspection of
the 16,000-strong, North Atlantic Treaty Organization-led force since taking
charge of the alliance last month, after heading the U.S. military prison
camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, a NATO spokesman said.
The chief envoy for the U.N., which is mediating the Kosovo status talks,
plans to issue his recommendations for the province in a report soon after
Serbian elections this Sunday. Many fear the report by Martti Ahtisaari
could spark renewed violence between Kosovo's Serb minority and its majority
ethnic Albanians, who want independence from Serbia.
NATO's commander in Kosovo pledged last week that NATO peacekeepers,
known as KFOR, would respond to any security threat in the runup to an
announcement on its future status.
Craddock - accompanied by Adm. Harry Ulrich, commander of NATO's Joint
Force Command based in Naples, Italy - was to meet with Kosovo's Prime
Minister Agim Ceku.
Kosovo has been administered by a U.N. mission since mid-1999, when
NATO launched an air war to halt a crackdown by Serb forces on separatist
ethnic Albanian rebels. Belgrade insists Kosovo should have autonomy but
remain within Serb borders.
January 16, 2007 07:04 ET (12:04 GMT)