Unsolicited advice to the United Nations

Kosovo: get it right now 

The soon-to-be-appointed UN special envoy who will negotiate over the status
of Kosovo faces an almost impossible task: to satisfy all those with a stake
in the region without denying minority rights, and to prevent the region
from being frozen in stalemate for decades.

By John Norris 

SOON the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, will appoint a special envoy to
begin difficult negotiations over Kosovo’s final status. This post will
probably go to a respected senior European diplomat, probably the former
Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari, with as many as three deputies,
including an American, a European and a Russian. But as the international
community has learned from repeated rounds of high-stakes diplomacy in the
Balkans over the past 15 years, some successful and some decidedly not, a
lot more than good intentions goes into getting the talks right.

The stakes are high. If the new envoy does not get Kosovo right, it could
become perpetually underdeveloped and prone to unrest, or stay frozen in a
decades-long stalemate like Cyprus. Equally important (and despite the fact
that Kosovo is unusual because of the 1999 Nato military intervention that
paved the way for this current process), the international community’s
handling of Kosovo will be read around the globe as having broader meaning
for what it says about minority rights, self-determination and the way to
deal with breakaway territories. So here is some unsolicited advice for the
new special envoy.

If you don’t have real authority, your mission will fail. After a few rounds
of shuttle diplomacy between Pristina, Belgrade, Moscow and points west,
don’t be surprised if you hit an impasse. At this point, you will need to
have the power to put new proposals on the table to get the talks moving.
Leaders in this region have seen a string of high-level envoys come and go
who did not have the standing to take strong action.

Obviously, you will need to respect the bottom lines that will be
deal-breakers for the Contact Group, but if the Serbs, Albanians and
Russians see you as little more than a letter carrier from Washington and
London, it will not be long before they start dealing directly with these
capitals and turning you into a mere figurehead. This is important, because
this is one of the first occasions (since Lord Owen’s rocky involvement in
the early phases of the Bosnian war) that a European has been given such
pre-eminence in Balkans diplomacy. Unless you have real powers, many in the
Balkans will assume that you are simply answering to your US deputy or more
powerful handlers in the White House. It will only take a few times when you
need to step out of the room to get instructions before others around the
table begin to think they should be negotiating directly with the front
office.

 
Future uncertain: a displaced Albanian boy in his temporary home in Pristina
Hazir Reka - Reuters In a marked shift from its position in its first term,
the Bush administration is now much more willing to take on the Kosovo
issue, and feels that there is no realistic alternative to moving forward
with resolving Kosovo’s status. The core team of career US diplomats dealing
with the issue are seasoned Balkans hands and quite able. That said, it is
far from clear how the Bush administration, which never seems to like being
the junior partner in anything, will adjust to letting Europe take the lead
on Kosovo. Washington has enough on its hands right now, with everything
from Iraq to New Orleans crowding for attention, and it should be happy that
Europe has taken greater ownership of all issues Balkan. Yet, there also
continues to be an almost instinctive dislike within the White House for
European leadership on matters of high diplomacy, and a fundamental distrust
of Europe’s ability to stick to tough positions.

The key to dealing with the administration will be to get their full buy-in
early, maintain good rapport with your US deputy and convey a sense of
professionalism and forward movement that avoids grandstanding. You will
also need to maintain a good relationship with the US military officials
involved in planning discussions, because most people in the Balkans still
see the US military as the most important muscle behind any agreement, even
if its long-term presence in the region remains relatively token.

Dealing with Russia is both vital and uniquely frustrating. You will need to
endure many long nights and much second-hand smoke before you get Moscow’s
UN security council stamp of approval for any Kosovo deal, regardless of
whether you have a Russian deputy or not. There are many Soviet-trained
hardliners still in positions of real power in the Kremlin, and most still
view Kosovo as yet another loss for Russia’s broad sphere of influence. But
image remains important for the Russians. President Putin is eager to be
seen as a heavyweight on the global stage, and he uses such appearances to
bolster his sometimes shaky domestic credibility. Your meetings with the
Russians should be well publicised and frequent. You would be wise to speak
of the Russians as tough negotiators who care deeply about the minority
rights of the Serbs, and you should offer Moscow iron-clad guarantees that
the West will not accept the creation of a Greater Albania that merges
Kosovo and Albania. Whatever new status awaits Kosovo, it is vital that this
arrangement not trigger further rounds of irredentism and territorial
claims; allowing Kosovo to merge with Albania would only destabilise
Macedonia and other states in the region already wrestling with their own
ethnic problems.

Russia has learned the hard way that being obstructionist in the Balkans is
counterproductive, but it is important to remember that the Russians also
fear that any precedent established in Kosovo will eventually be applied to
Chechnya. Russia has a large and restive Muslim population in its southern
republics, and would be wise to learn the lesson that Serbia failed to grasp
in Kosovo: protecting minority rights is the surest means to head off
insurrections before they begin.

The key to dealing with the Serbian government will be applying steady
public pressure and using your position as a bully pulpit while dealing with
Belgrade’s legitimate concerns. Kosovo remains a hot issue in Serbian
politics, and few Serbian politicians have been honest to their constituents
about the general situation on the ground in Kosovo over the past 15 years.
Many Serbian politicians acknowledge behind closed doors that it would be
easier for them if it looked like their arms were being twisted by the
international community. The general sentiment is “Please impose this rather
than make us look like the bad guys in public”. Yet, this effort cannot be
totally heavy-handed; as one senior US official noted, it will be important
to “not totally drive the Serbs against the wall. If we drive the Serbs into
a corner they will not bend.” It is probably better to err on the side of
toughness; some of the Serbian officials involved in the talks have been
through many similar exercises during the past decade and will be anything
but starstruck at your title or the importance of your mission.

Figuring out practical plans to respect minority Serbian rights in Kosovo is
the best way to take the wind out of the sails of Serbian complaints. Kosovo
is the site of important historic and religious sites for the Serbs, and
access to and protection of religious sites will be a central concern. It
might also be useful to locate some government ministries in the heavily
Serbian city of Mitrovica, and establishing security arrangements that can
be trusted to protect Serbs will be a central measure of your credibility.
The issue of decentralising government powers in Kosovo will also loom
large, but while decentralisation is fine, attempts to partition Kosovo are
not. Lastly, the French “non” vote on the EU constitution will only make
your job harder, and the loss of potential early EU membership for Serbia
has left the international community with one less carrot to dangle before
Belgrade.

Dealing with the Kosovo Albanian negotiating team will be a mess. Getting
unity even within the team will be tricky business, and a senior diplomat in
Pristina recently complained that the current provisional government of
Kosovo spends most of its time “trying to appear to be doing something
without actually doing anything”. The recent announcement that President
Ibrahim Rugova is suffering from cancer will only intensify the jockeying
among the Albanians for political position, and these party disputes have
often veered into violence in the past. Making sure that former Kosovo
Liberation Army fighters understand that violence is counterproductive and
has no place in the political arena will be key to bringing some harmony to
the Kosovar Albanian delegation.

While the Kosovar Albanians will likely get much of what they want out of
talks, in that they are unlikely ever to be ruled directly by Belgrade
again, do not expect them to go along happily with the process. You will
need to be every bit as blunt with the Albanians as you are with the Serbs.
Probably the best thing you can do for Kosovo and Kosovars is to develop a
reasonable plan for the continued international civilian presence in Kosovo
over time. Kosovo is still plagued by cronyism and corruption, with little
experience in running government. By pushing the Kosovars to accept the role
of a reasonably intrusive continued international civilian presence,
particularly in areas such as the justice system, you can help avoid
creating a Kosovo that is ripe for failure.

As the world has learned painfully in the Balkans, just because everyone
agrees to a plan does not mean that it is necessarily a good plan. One need
only think back to the creation of safe havens and the fiasco of Srebrenica
to appreciate that fact. There will be times when all of the capitals with
which you are dealing are so eager to reach a deal that they will sign
almost anything. The devil is in the detail and if you do not resist the
many half-baked sovereignty options with which you will be presented, Europe
could be left with Kosovo as a problem for decades to come.

Even the EU itself has recognised that Kosovo will need to have such
fundamentals as treaty-making powers and distinct borders if it is ever to
be integrated into the EU and other European institutions years down the
road, and this is likely its best hope looking forward.

Welcome to your new job
http://mondediplo.com/2005/10/05kosovo


                           Srpska Informativna Mreza

                                serbian_way@antic.org

                            http://www.antic.org/

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