The Language 
<http://www.balkanalysis.com/2007/12/21/the-language-game-of-kosovo-diplomacy/> 
 Game of Kosovo Diplomacy 


12/21/2007 (Balkanalysis.com) 

By Nikolas Rajkovic*

Three key words have animated the policy-speak on Kosovo to date: 
‘negotiation’, ‘compromise’ and ‘solution.’ These terms seem uncontroversial in 
their literal sense and have been accepted by the parties and the ‘Troika’ 
powers (the US, EU and Russia) without dispute. As such, the verbal landscape 
has been marked by the strategic use of this vocabulary. Yet the professed 
failure of Kosovo ‘status talks’ now suggests a profound disconnect between 
stated and actual meaning. The objective here is to critically examine how 
these terms have been used in diplomatic practice, with a view to revealing the 
contradictions between rhetoric and action which have fed this latest Balkan 
crisis.

Recent ‘Troika’ talks were grounded on a commitment to negotiation. Washington, 
Brussels and Moscow agreed that a lasting and sustainable solution was best 
attained through negotiated consent. However with the proclaimed failure of 
negotiations, that commitment is wavering in Washington and some European 
capitals due to the alleged inability of Belgrade and Pristina to make mutual 
concessions. However, does this depiction place blame on the wrong doorstep? An 
affirmative answer points to how Washington scuttled negotiations by announcing 
its intention to recognize Kosovo ‘independence’ in the event that ‘Troika’ 
talks failed. This created the bad faith incentive for Pristina to thwart 
negotiations and run out the clock until December 10. The ‘Troika’ negotiations 
existed in name only.

This point regarding spoiled negotiations brings us to the next term, 
compromise, and its similar misuse. The most commonly stated storyline is that 
Belgrade and Pristina failed to compromise. However, does this account match 
actual negotiating behaviour as seen? When one examines the conduct of ‘Troika’ 
negotiations between June and today, a noticeable pattern emerges: Belgrade 
offered genuine models of far-reaching autonomy (e.g. Hong Kong, the Aland 
Islands), while Pristina merely reiterated ‘independence.’ Indeed, Pristina did 
present a post-independence ‘treaty of friendship,’ but was that a bona fide 
compromise? In fact, at a recent summit in Brussels, outgoing Kosovo first 
minister Agim Ceku made no secret of his unwillingness to compromise when he 
hailed Kosovo independence as the “most predictable, unsurprising and 
unremarkable development in south-eastern Europe for generations.”

Thus we come to the final term – solution – and the current efforts to conflate 
its meaning with independence. The narrative is as follows: failed negotiations 
and inadequate compromise make independence the only viable solution for 
European policy-makers. The first problem with this claim is procedural; it 
runs afoul of the clean hands rule, which states that the Kosovo Albanians 
should not be allowed to profit from their own misdemeanour of failing to 
negotiate and compromise in good faith. A unilateral, one-sided statement of 
independence is perilous in that it provokes foreseeable and dire consequences. 
Here independence advocates should be taken to task for their ostrich-like 
disclaimers that they don’t know what will happen after independence is 
declared.

First, the historical record is unequivocal: defiant secession in most of the 
ex-Yugoslav republics has produced a series of bloody inter-ethnic wars. 
Second, one-sided independence is likely to prompt Kosovo’s Serbian-controlled 
north to ‘secede’ and rejoin Serbia proper, prompting attacks from the 
unofficial Albanian National Army and ensuing reactions from Kosovo Serbs. 
Third, Kosovo secession hands the ultimate Christmas gift to the populist 
Serbian Radical Party and secessionist forces within neighbouring Bosnia and 
Macedonia. Finally, the unilateral dismemberment of Serbia would fundamentally 
change the rules of sovereignty which have maintained precarious stability in 
the Western Balkans over the past 12 years. Plainly stated, Kosovo independence 
would herald that ‘all bets are off’ in the Balkans and elsewhere.

In closing, diplomacy on Kosovo has produced feats of rhetoric unmatched in 
actual practice. The present crisis on Europe’s doorstep is attributable not to 
failed negotiations but rather disingenuous diplomacy that has failed to make 
the ethnic parties ultimately responsible for their future. Such a result can 
only happen when the ‘Troika’ powers unanimously and resolutely declare that a 
true ‘solution’ only rests in genuine negotiation and real compromise; and 
anything less is poor fiction. The political end-game which must be sought has 
no home in the zero-sum theatrics of independence, but rather must be found in 
the politics of good and responsible government, bearing the flag of prudence 
and caution.

………………………..

*Nikolas Rajkovic is a political sciences researcher at the European University 
Institute, Florence, Italy

http://www.balkanalysis.com/2007/12/21/the-language-game-of-kosovo-diplomacy/

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