Pristina, we’ve got a problem
These were the talking points I used this morning in a remote appearance at the Kosovo Leadership Conference in Pristina:
- Let me begin by telling you how much I regret I am not with you there in Pristina. I haven’t had the pleasure of a stroll in Mother Teresa Street in more than three years. My recent illness made the trip inadvisable even now, but I am glad to report that I am well on my way to full recovery.
- The bad news is that the Balkan region is not recovering. There is plenty of blame to go around but let me start with people outside the Balkans.
- There is no more important factor in determining what happens in the next few years in Pristina, Sarajevo, and Podgorica than the outcome of the war in Ukraine.
- It isn’t fair, but your fate depends on whether Ukraine is able to restore its sovereignty and territorial integrity, including Donbas and Crimea.
- If Russia is successful in getting a settlement that recognizes the annexation of any part of Ukraine, you can expect Serbia to redouble its efforts to create the “Serbian world.”
- This is well understood in Belgrade and Banja Luka.
- Aleksandar Vulin and Milorad Dodik were in Moscow just last week no doubt cheering on the Russian army and getting their own marching orders for continuing to disrupt the Balkans and block any more Western success in the region.
- President Vucic’s rent-a-crowd rally in Belgrade Friday manifested that Serbia is seriously pursuing “all Serbs in one country,” in cooperation with Dodik and allies in Montenegro.
- Belgrade’s reaction to the installation of elected Albanian mayors in northern Kosovo also demonstrated its hegemonic territorial ambitions.
- The “Serbian World” and the “Russian World” are the same idea meant to signal that no Serb or Russian should be subject to a liberal democratic order in which non-Serbs are able to gain a majority. Ethnic autocracy in a defined, unified territory is Russia and Serbia’s common goal.
- That is incompatible with existing state structures in the Balkans and Ukraine, which include ample protection for numerical minorities.
- That said, I am supposed to tell you what the US and EU can do about counteracting the Russian and Serbian efforts to deprive their neighbors of sovereignty and territorial integrity.
- The first thing they can do is declaratory. That much they have done: Washington and Brussels have been clear enough about their rhetorical support for not moving borders in the Balkans.
- The EU commitment, however, is tainted. The five EU member states that do not recognize Kosovo weaken the Union’s effectiveness in the Balkans.
- Nothing would strengthen EU Special Envoy Lajcak’s hand more than a few more recognitions.
- The EU could also make itself more effective by levying sanctions on Dodik and his coterie in Republika Srpska. And both the US and EU should prepare sanctions on political forces in Montenegro if they continue to head in the Russian direction.
- I don’t like to say it, but the American commitment to sovereignty and territorial integrity in the Balkans is also clouded.
- On Friday Washington supported the Serbian challenge to the elected mayors, condemned Prime Minister Kurti’s decision to have them take their rightful places, and failed to denounce the Serb violence and deployment of the Serbian armed forces to the border.
- Pristina, we’ve got a problem.
- I understand Prime Minister Kurti’s desire to proceed with implementation of the election results and to ignore ethnic differences. He wants to exercise Kosovo’s sovereignty in its whole territory and believes in equal rights for all citizens.
- I am sympathetic with those goals. But has he got a plan for how to proceed now that Belgrade has mobilized its rioters to resist?
- The ethnicity of the mayors is not the problem. The problem is capability, in two senses: installing the mayors needed both international and local acceptance.
- As public figures in Pristina as well as the Council of Albanian Ambassadors have said, Kosovo needs its US and EU friends. It doesn’t have them on its side on this issue.
- The Kosovo police seem to have done reasonably well on Friday, but things got out of hand yesterday as Serbs attacked KFOR. My sympathies are with the Italians, Hungarians, Moldovans, and any others who were injured.
- I won’t however presume to tell Albin that he made a mistake. That will depend on how things evolve.
- But I would like to know what his plan is now? How will the mayors be kept safe? How will they be able to conduct their business in these circumstances?
- And I ask that we identify clearly what the problem is. The problem is Serb resistance. There are no substitutes for a modicum of local acceptance if you want the mayors to be effective.
- Belgrade’s objectives are clear: it wants to partition Kosovo and Bosnia, de facto if not de jure, as well as swallow Montenegro whole. Russia backs those objectives, which would weaken NATO and the EU.
- Pristina’s objectives should be just as clear: to assert its sovereignty and territorial integrity and bring the whole country into NATO and the EU as soon as possible.
- Those are also Ukraine’s objectives, which I believe they will achieve, sooner and easier than many expect, with US and EU assistance as well as broad local support, including among Russian speakers. Military victory is not guaranteed, but it is within sight.
- I am hoping Kosovo will do as well on its nonmilitary battlefield. But I repeat: Pristina, you’ve got a problem. You can’t get there without US and EU support as well as local acceptance.
- Reconstructing both will now need to be major objectives for Kosovo’s leadership.
Tags : Balkans, China, European Union, Russia, United States
4 thoughts on “Pristina, we’ve got a problem”
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Certainly, the title line is correct, “Pristina we have a problem”. It is a problem shared by key actors, including, Kosovo, Serbia, the US and EU with implications impacting on the RF, Ukraine and Balkans in general.
The premise put forth in #4 is absolutely correct in that the outcome with the Russian-Ukraine conflict will hugely affect what happens between the protagonists Kosovo and Serbia. Russia has been fomenting frictions in the Balkans for the past quarter century even instigating problems in Montenegro. The Ukraine-Russia confrontation will have broader existential implications for other nearby nations such as Georgia, Moldova and the Baltics, as well as the health of democracy in the West should Russia prevail.
That being said, I disagree with the tenants of the remaining lines. The installation of the Kosovo Albanian mayors in the north cannot be considered legitimate as the majority Serbian population did not vote. The premise set forth in #20 is incorrect. Arbin Kurti has no interest in “ignoring” ethnic differences; he is exacerbating the differences. He is an ideologue who has no wish to compromise. During his entire tenure, he has attempted to force Kosovo institutions and sovereignty onto Serbs and has undertaken active measures to cast them out of existing structures. As a case in point, he has endorsed the position of refusing to pay KEK electric bills in the north insisting that Serbs pay unpaid bills for the past 20 years. Such is akin to soft ethnic cleansing since no Serbs would be able to pay such outstanding debts, nor perhaps should they, since no accurate bill readings have been provided. Kurti’s failure to abide by numerous international agreements with regard to the Association of Serb Municipalities and other instruments are additional cases in point. His efforts to exercise sovereignty include the removal of all “undesirable” Serbs.
Of course, Vucic and Dodic have exacerbated the situation for their own nationalist gains and arguably on behalf of Russia. Profound sympathies are due the injured Kosovo and EU Police, as well as KFOR.
However, the current dire situation must be put into perspective. The oppressed Kosovo Albanian majority represented by an exclusionist government is now the oppressor of the Serbian minority. Pristina does have a problem with its exclusionist, ethnic centered, non-representative policies that have alienated Kosovo Serbs, major elements of the EU and the US government.
As a consequence of the current actions of the government, no non recognizing country should consider recognition of Kosovo, visa liberalization should be taken off the COE agenda and certain sanctions considered until the current government becomes compliant with its international agreements. Serbia should likewise be treated.
“he is exacerbating the differences”? On the contrary, serbian destructive politics is exacerbating the differences.
“refusing to pay KEK electric bills in the north insisting that Serbs pay unpaid bills for the past 20 years.” Tell me where in the world it is allowed to use electricity without paying in normal circumstances?
“soft ethnic cleansing”? Check the real soft ethnic cleansing in Albanian municipalities in Serbia, if you care for The Truth.
“exclusionist government”? Kosova government is exclusionist for the evil. The exclusionist toward the greater good is Serbia government, if you pay closer attention.
“exclusionist, ethnic centered, non-representative policies” – this describes exactly the Serbian government (and not Kosova government).
Thanks God you are not a decision-making factor!
Translated in Albanian:
https://botimetrb.wordpress.com/2023/06/05/daniel-server-prishtine-e-kemi-nje-problem/