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US steps up push for Kosovo independence
By Paul Mitchell
13 September 2007
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The promise President George W. Bush made in June to Albanian
Prime Minister Sali Berisha that Kosovo would be independent by
the end of 2007 has polarised Europe and antagonised Russia.
A meeting in Portugal on September 7/8 attended by European
Union foreign ministers tried to present a common front during
talks on the provinces status involving Kosovan Albanian
and Serbian leaders. Most commentators believe the two sides will
fail to reach an agreement by the December 10 deadline set by
United Nations (UN) Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon. Kosovan Prime
Minister Agim Ceku and Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said
they doubt the talks will lead to a compromise settlement.
Ceku declared, The only development I expect is the declaration
and recognition of Kosovos independence. This must happen
immediately after December 10.
The United States has announced it would immediately recognise
Kosovo, hoping that it will have pressured a critical mass
of EU countries by then to come on board. The Kosovo government
will then invite the EU to fulfil the central role
envisaged in the conditional independence plan published
by UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari in February 2007. It will
supervise the transition to full independence, send a 1,850-strong
rule of law missionthe largest in EU historyto
reform the police, prisons and judiciary, provide aid and offer
the carrot of EU membership.
Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has said Serbia will annul
any unilateral proclamation of independence. He has demanded the
US explain its support for Kosovan independence and urged the
UN to take measures against what he called US policies of
force. He accused the West of trying to create a NATO statelet
in Kosovo, and his Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) has removed
membership in NATO from its election manifesto. According to UK
professor and Balkan expert Mark Almond, the US and EU have been
surprised by the unity shown by Kostunica and the
more pro-Western President Boris Tadic and his Democrats (DS).
A declaration of independence could encourage further separatist
sentiments, pogroms and bloodshed despite the US insistence that
Kosovan independence is a one-off case. Serbia could
claim a slice of northern Serb-dominated Kosovo, and the remaining
half of Kosovos 200,000 Serbs who live in scattered enclaves
might be forced to move there. A raft of other separatist claims
could follow, including from Albanians living in Macedonia and
in the Presovo Valley in southern Serbia and Serbs living in the
Republika Srpska region of Bosnia. The Vojvodina Union of Socialists
in Serbias Vojvodina province where many ethnic Hungarians
live is again calling for increased autonomy and demanding
that Vojvodina be given equal status in a federal Serbia.
The dangers were highlighted by Dr. Jonathan Eyal, an analyst
at the UKs Royal United Services Institute, who said a large
number of EU member states oppose a unilateral declaration
of independence, which would be another breach of international
law similar to the NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999.
Luis Amado of Portugal, which holds the rotating EU presidency,
warned the European foreign ministers meeting that maintaining
the blocs unity on the issue was key to the credibility
of Europes foreign policy.
I cannot conceive that we could have at the end a situation
where there is a strong position of Russia, a strong position
of the United States, and where Europe simply does not exist,
Amado added.
The EUs foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, reiterated
Amados concerns, saying Kosovo was a European question and
the EU had to remain united. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner
added, Europes unity is more important than the fate
of Kosovo.... In seeking a solution for Kosovos status,
we should look to find an outcome that would satisfy all sides,
and respect Russias position.
Amado admitted he did not know how each member state will respond
if an agreement is not reached by December 10. Any member state
has the right to veto EU foreign policy resolutions.
Within the EU, Britain and France are most prepared to recognise
Kosovan independence. Germanys position is less certain,
as there is more pressure domestically not to stay in the NATO-led
force in Kosovo without a new UN mandate. Spain, Hungary, Greece,
Slovakia, Cyprus and Romania are the most reluctant because of
either ties to Serbia or fears that it could encourage a wave
of separatism in their own countries.
Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis said Serbia must agree
to any agreement on Kosovo, adding, There are no solutions
which can be imposed from above. Any solution must be acceptedor
at least toleratedby all sides. Slovakia and Romania
are concerned that Kosovan independence would set a precedent
for their large ethnic Hungarian populations, and Spain has similar
concerns regarding Catalonia and the Basque Country.
Russia is threatened by the US-led drive for Kosovos
independence. Kosovo became the subject of a bitter public clash
between the US and Russia in the run-up to G8 summit, reflecting
a growing and multifaceted confrontation between the US, which
is asserting its power in former Soviet republics and spheres
of influence, and a Russian regime, encouraged by rising oil revenues
and the crisis in Iraq, seeking to realise its own aspirations
as a regional and world power.
Russia has refused to accept any settlement of Kosovos
status that is not approved by Serbia and rejects the December
10 deadline.
The latest round of talks was initiated after Western powers
attempted to push through Kosovan independence at the UN Security
Council on July 20, believing Russia would eventually agree to
the rescinding of Resolution 1244 under which Kosovo has been
administered as a UN protectorate while still recognising Serbias
sovereignty over the province.
US Secretary of State Nicholas Burns has stressed that the
US sees Kosovo as part of wider strategic considerations in the
Balkans, the Caucasus and the region around the Black and Caspian
seas, where much remains to be done to support countries
resisting Russia.
Russia has replied with President Vladimir Putin proclaiming
it natural that a resurgent Russia is returning there [to
the Balkans] and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stating
that Kosovo is one of several so-called red line
issues for Russia where we cannot fail to react and
we must stick to our position to the end.
Lavrov is demanding that the Western powers recognise Russias
growing power, saying perhaps it is time to think of a new
definition of Atlanticism that does not exclude Russia and
involves a triple understanding, between the United States,
Russia, and the European Union Such a troika
could steer the global boat into untroubled waters,
he added.
The current talks are already being overseen by a Troikaof
envoys US Ambassador Frank Wisner, Aleksandr Botsan-Kharchenko
for Russia and Wolfgang Ischingerappointed by the Contact
Group, made up of Russia, the US, the UK, France, Italy and Germany.
Wisner claimed it was up to the Kosovan Albanian and Serb leaders
to decide their own future. The Troikas mandate is
to encourage both sides to come up with their own ideas, as we
are not going to suggest any of our own. At the end of the talks
we will submit a report to the UN secretary general, Wisner
declared, adding incredulously, All ideas are on the table.
The Ahtisaari plan is there as well. Both sides are free to suggest
ideas of their own. We are here to hear them out and take them
into consideration.
Although Wisner insisted that partition of Kosovo was not an
option, Ischinger caused a storm by suggesting in early
August it could be if they want that. Although Ischinger
later denied talks on partition were taking place, in early September
Maxime Verhagen, the Dutch foreign minister, became the first
EU minister to mention partition publicly.
A recent Wall Street Journal editorial called on the
US administration not to waver and give Serbia a stark choice:
a future in league with Russia, or the EU and NATO. It continued,
Caught between a pushy Kremlin, weak-kneed Europe and otherwise-occupied
Washington, the Kosovars are being denied their happy ending
and demanded the US forcefully steps in to usher this province
of two million to independence without any messy compromises.
The International Crisis Groupan organisation of former
and current CEOs, diplomats and politicians including Ahtisaari
himselfare pressing the EU to use the breathing space
offered by the talks to set up a coalition of willing states
that would also recognise a unilateral proclamation of Kosovan
independence and prevent the discrediting of the EUs foreign
policy and its efforts to project itself as a credible international
actor in conflicts elsewhere.
This is the sort of language that could lead to war.
See Also:
US and Russia at loggerheads
over Kosovo independence
[23 July 2007]
US leads push for Kosovo independence
[13 June 2007]
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