Kosovo Needs a Multilateral Approach
by Gordon N. Bardos

05.04.2007

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Permanent representatives from the United Nations Security Council have just
returned from a fact finding mission to the Balkans and will soon begin
debating whether or not to endorse granting Kosovo independence. There are
legitimate arguments both in favor of granting Kosovo independence and
against. But an argument currently making the rounds in Washington—that the
United States should recognize Kosovo's independence even without Security
Council approval—is almost certainly wrong.
In the United States, senators Lieberman (D-CT), Biden (D-DE), McCain (R-AZ)
and Smith (R-OR) have introduced a resolution to the Senate calling for a
unilateral U.S. recognition of Kosovo's independence. Yet an ad hoc process
which does not enjoy clear international legitimacy, with some countries
recognizing Kosovo's independence and others opting not to, will
significantly complicate an already messy diplomatic situation in the
Balkans. The International Crisis Group, meanwhile, is arguing that a quick
move towards independence is needed to prevent frustrated extremists in
Kosovo from exporting violence to other parts of the Balkans. But granting
Kosovo independence outright could just as easily whet the appetites of
militants who have already engaged in violence in Macedonia, Montenegro and
southern Serbia, especially when the United States remains intent on
reducing its military presence in the region.

Just as in the case of Iraq, moreover, many Washington policymakers
supporting unilateral recognition of Kosovo's independence are relying on
best-case scenarios of what U.S. actions will lead to. And few are
contemplating how to handle the southern Balkans if things go wrong.

Things are not well in southeastern Europe. A member of Bosnia's collective
presidency recently noted that political tensions in that country were at
their highest levels since the end of Bosnia's civil war in 1995, and one of
Bosnia's leading journalists, Senad Pecanin, has said that he "fears for the
peace" there. Three months after Serbia's parliamentary elections last
January, Belgrade's political elites have yet to form a government, raising
the specter that Serbia may need to hold another round of elections. This
effectively means that Serbian politics could be in disarray through much of
the summer. In Serbia's Sandzak region, adjoining both Bosnia and Kosovo,
the recent discovery of an Islamic militant training camp full of weapons
and Al-Qaeda propaganda materials shows that Wahhabists are making inroads
in the Balkans' economically underdeveloped regions. In Kosovo itself,
ethnic minorities continue to suffer under the worst human rights situation
in Europe, unemployment and official corruption are at extremely high levels
even by regional standards, and there is a strong possibility that a
precipitate move towards independence could provoke Kosovo's Serbs north of
the Ibar River to declare independence themselves, creating yet another
frozen conflict in Europe. Even the Balkan success stories are facing
difficult times. London's *Economist*, for instance, recently questioned
whether Romania can remain a credible member of the EU given its fragile
domestic politics and high levels of judicial corruption.

It is in this regional context that American policymakers claim that quickly
granting Kosovo independence without UN Security Council approval will
stabilize the region, yet just the opposite could prove true as well.

This line of thinking, moreover, also fails to appreciate how granting
Kosovo independence without Security Council approval will affect strategic
relations between the United States, the European Union, Russia and China.
Moscow and Beijing have both expressed their unhappiness, both with the
Kosovo future status process and with Washington's lack of respect for
Russian and Chinese concerns about how Kosovo may set a precedent in other
parts of the world. Many Europeans are also uneasy about a unilateral U.S.
move to recognize Kosovo's independence. Swedish Foreign Minister Carl
Bildt, one of Europe's most experienced Balkan hands, warned last week that
the U.S. was "playing with fire with the transatlantic relationship and
playing with fire in the Balkans" if the United States unilaterally
recognized Kosovo's independence. At a time when all the major powers need
to show unity in dealing with Iraq, Iran and North Korea, for the United
States to break ranks over Kosovo would be foolhardy.

Only time will tell if an independent Kosovo is a stabilizing factor in the
Balkans. But an independent Kosovo that does not respect the rights of its
ethnic minorities or that is a threat to its regional neighbors certainly
will not be. And a process which grants Kosovo independence without UN
Security Council approval will exacerbate tensions both in the Balkans and
in other parts of the world as well. Russia's permanent representative to
the UN, Vitaly Churkin, recently said that Kosovo may be the most important
issue the Security Council deals with in this decade. Clearly, what this
situation calls for is careful multilateral diplomacy and keeping all the
major players onside, not unilateral actions based on best-case scenarios of
what might happen. Strategic wishful thinking led to
the Iraq tragedy, and Washington should not make the same mistake in the
Balkans.


Gordon N. Bardos is assistant director of the Harriman Institute at Columbia
University's School of International and Public Affairs

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