Moscow furious over Kosovo

Sees West's nod to independence as dire precedent


 
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over_kosovo?mode=PF> Print| Text size – + By Megan K. Stack 

Los Angeles Times / February 15, 2008 

MOSCOW - Kosovo's looming independence, and promises of quick US and
European recognition, have undercut and infuriated Russia at a moment when
this oil-rich behemoth is eager to show that its global clout has been
restored, analysts say.


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Russian officials have spent weeks issuing dire assessments of the
UN-administered province's upcoming declaration of independence from Serbia,
expected to be announced this weekend.

The Russians have repeatedly derided Kosovo's possible change in status as a
Pandora's box that will destabilize Europe by setting off a chain reaction
of shifting borders. They have blasted the West for embracing Kosovo's
independence without taking the matter to the United Nations Security
Council, where Russia wields a veto.

But the world doesn't seem to be paying much attention, and underneath the
bluster, Russia has found itself relatively powerless to steer the situation
to its liking. At a time when Moscow is seeking to play the strong man again
after a decade of post-Soviet weakness, this sudden impotence is tough to
stomach.

"The Russian position, in the end, will be humiliation," said Lilia
Shevtsova, a senior associate at the Carnegie Moscow Center.

In a last-ditch effort to stave off the declaration, Russia has called for
an emergency session of the Security Council. But the United States and many
European countries have already indicated their readiness to recognize
Kosovo's independence.

The European Union is preparing to send an 1,800-member security and justice
force to the province as early as this weekend, setting the stage for the
exit of UN officials who have administered the area since 1999, when NATO
drove out Serbian troops seen as abusing Kosovo's mostly Muslim population.
Russia and Serbia say the EU mission is illegal.

Kosovo's independence is sure to dramatically increase tensions at a time
when Russia and the United States are already clashing over a proposed
American missile defense system, Iran's nuclear program, and the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization ambitions of several former Soviet states. Some
Russian analysts described the US support for Kosovo's ambitions as a
blunder on par with the invasion of Iraq.

"This will be used as yet another confirmation of the allegation that the
West is not playing by the rules," said Andrei Kortunov, president of the
New Eurasia foundation, adding: "It's yet another manifestation that it's
difficult, if not impossible, to deal with the West on serious matters."

© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.


 

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