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http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080516/EDITORIAL
/350997078/1013






Serbia's mighty challenge


THE WASHINGTON TIMES EDITORIAL
May 16, 2008 

Elections held this week in Serbia provide hope that this Balkan nation will
at last chart a course of cooperation and integration with its neighbors.
The pro-European Boris Tadic, leader of the Democratic Party, garnered 38
percent of the vote and is currently attempting to assemble a ruling
coalition. The party formerly led by Slobodan Milosevic, the Socialist
Party, is now a moderate left party led by Ivic Dacic and is in the position
of kingmaker: 20 seats are needed in order for Mr. Tadic to obtain a
majority and form the next government.

 

The May 11 elections were pivotal in a nation which has been at the center
of much of the turbulence which has plagued the region since the bloody
breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. At stake in the recent contest is
whether the Serbs are willing to begin negotiations for entry into the
European Union, despite the unresolved issue of the status of Kosovo. The
territory has been under interim U.N. jurisdiction since 1999 following a
NATO bombing campaign which routed the Serbs who were ethnically cleansing
the Albanian inhabitants (they compose 90 per cent of the population). In
February 2008, the Assembly of Kosovo declared independence from Serbia —
and won the recognition of the United States, Britain and the European
Union. Yet Belgrade, with the backing of Moscow, continues to oppose what it
views as an assault on the territorial integrity of Serbia.

 

Despite his pro-European bent, Mr.Tadic is also unwilling to allow Kosovo to
secede. However, he differs from his opponents because he insists Serbia
should begin to negotiate entry into the European Union as an issue separate
from the status of Kosovo. This was hotly contested by former Prime Minister
Vojislav Kostunica, leader of the Serbian Democratic Party, and Tomislav
Nikolic, leader of the ultra-nationalist Radical Party: They maintain
Belgrade should cast its lot with Moscow and defy the European Union
altogether.

 

Therefore the elections are ultimately about the fundamental direction the
Serbs will take: Will they look to the East and continue to cultivate the
fervent nationalist and anti-Western policies that led them into four wars
and turned them into an international pariah? Or will they look to the West
and begin to take steps — however small and tepid — toward European
integration and living in prosperity with their neighbors?

 

The election results reveal that Serbia is still deeply divided. In his long
career, Mr. Tadic has blazed a progressive path on numerous occasions. Dare
we hope that he will succeed in forging a coalition, thus paving the way
toward Serbia's Western transformation? Upon his shoulders rests this mighty
task.

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