http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2010/sep/28/serbian-surprise/


The Serbian Surprise
Charles Simic


An astonishing event occurred in the United Nations this month: the government 
of Serbia made a complete reversal of its policy toward Kosovo. Ever since 
Kosovo’s declaration of independence in 2008, the Serbian government has 
maintained that it will never recognize the right of its former province to 
secede, but will fight through diplomacy and through the United Nations to get 
it back. And it continued to maintain that position even after the 
International 
Court of Justice in the Hague ruled in July that there is nothing in 
international law that prohibits Kosovo from declaring independence. Now, to 
the 
surprise of everyone—including me—the Serbian government has agreed to hold 
compromise talks with Kosovo. 

Despite the setback of the Hague Court opinion, which appeared to foreclose any 
possibility of continuing to argue that Kosovo’s declaration of independence 
was 
illegal, the Serbian government had initially announced that it was going back 
to the United Nations with a new resolution to defy the decision of the 
International Court of Justice and state once again Serbia’s position that a 
unilateral declaration of independence is an unacceptable way to solve 
territorial questions. 

As could be expected, the supporters of Kosovo’s independence were exasperated. 
The foreign ministers of Germany and United Kingdom came to Belgrade to explain 
to the government there that this was a futile policy, that sooner or later 
they 
would have to sit down and have a serious talk with Kosovo Albanians regarding 
the status of the majority Serbs living in northern Kosovo, the Serbian 
Orthodox 
monasteries scattered in isolated enclaves elsewhere in the breakaway province, 
and scores of other problems bordering states are bound to have. But then—and 
here was the surprise—the government of Serbian President Boris Tadić agreed to 
introduce a compromise resolution calling for talks with Pristina, without 
bringing up the question of its legitimacy as a state. It praised the readiness 
of the European Union to ease the process of dialogue between the two sides and 
underlined that such talks would in themselves lead to peace, security and 
stability in the region. 

Serbian nationalists were caught off guard and said what one expected them to 
say: This was a historical betrayal perpetuated by a puppet government serving 
the interests of Washington and Brussels, which has now placed the country in 
the position of a vassal by agreeing to the creation of a secessionist state on 
sacred Serbian soil. Since when has it become okay, they demanded to know, for 
ethnic groups and regions to secede with the help of foreign armies and 
bombers? 
Who gave the right to these international hypocrites, like the Americans, who 
are still committing crimes the world over, or like the Germans who were 
slaughtering millions a few decades ago, to pass judgment on Serbia and Kosovo 
and arbitrate their dispute? And so forth. In the meantime, the government in 
Belgrade kept maintaining that it has no intention of officially recognizing 
Kosovo, and I don’t believe that the European Union will insist it does, since 
the EU knows that such a move would be political suicide for any Serbian 
government in the foreseeable future. 

Still, what made this coalition government, which has plenty of hard-line 
nationalists in its ranks, including its usually inflexible foreign minister, 
Vuk Jeremić, compromise? (In a recent interview, Jeremić said that “Kosovo is 
our Jerusalem.”) As many observers have long noted, one of the peculiarities of 
Serbian politicians is that they are rarely persuaded by appeals to reason. 
They 
take great pleasure in being inflexible and will proudly point to instances in 
their history when in defense of their rights they refused to yield even to 
overwhelming power. This is ordinarily an admirable characteristic in a people, 
but not when it comes to a cause that was lost decades ago. 

Did reason prevail, and the recognition that the current Kosovo policy hurts 
long term Serbian interests? I have no idea. It must have been made very clear 
to the Serbs that if they continued to take every opportunity to make a 
nuisance 
of themselves, their chance of joining the European Union would be zero. Of 
course, that would have been perfectly fine with the nationalists who are 
happiest when Serbia is isolated and hated by the West, but not with others who 
remember the policies pursued by Milosevic, which led to pointless conflicts 
with neighbors and so many self-inflicted and catastrophic defeats for which 
Serbs have no one but themselves to blame. 

September 28, 2010 2:45 p.m.

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